Notes
Provenance :
Lord Sandberg, his sale,
Antiquorum, Geneva, March
31- April 1, 2001, lot 115.
Literature :
The Sandberg Collection,
p. 238-239.
Illustrated and described in
"Les Heures de l'Amour"
by Roland Carrera, Editions
Scriptar/Antiquorum, Geneva,
1993, p. 37.
James Cox (circa 1723 - 1800)
Born in London around 1723, he was the son of Henry Cox, a
tailor. He became Free in 1745, at which time he was described
as a goldsmith. Cox also called himself a "jeweller". In December
1745, Cox married Elizabeth Liron. In June of that same year
he had set up shop in Racquet Court, where he remained until
1756. An elaborate trade card has survived from this period;
with a text in English, French, and German, it offers a "Great
Variety of Curious Work in Gold, Silver, and other Metalls: also
in Amber, Pearl, Tortoiseshell and Curious Stones". In 1756 Cox
entered into a partnership with Edward Grace and moved to
larger premises in Shoe Lane. However, Cox & Grace declared
bankruptcy in November 1758. The list of Cox and Grace's stock,
which was advertised for sale in 1760, was said to comprise
"things in the jeweling and toy business suitable both for
foreign and home trade". The Cox & Grace bankruptcy did
not stop Cox from advancing; on the contrary, he retained the
premises in Shoe Lane and continued working. In July 1763,
his bankruptcy proceedings terminated with his discharge. It
was during the 1760s and early 1770s that Cox became famous
for a very specific genre: elaborate and luxurious musical and
automaton clocks and watches, made of precious metals and
studded with precious stones, destined particularly for the
Ottoman, Indian and Chinese empires, and especially for the
court of the Chinese Emperor himself. The first record of such
activity on Cox's part is a "notice of two curious Clocks" which
appeared in the Gentleman?s Magazine of December 1766.
During this period, and until 1773, Cox's chief "mechanic" was
a brillant Belgian, John Joseph Merlin (1735-1803). Merlin is
generally considered to have been Cox?s "right-hand man",
and any pieces signed by Cox which can be securely dated to
before 1773, may have been designed or even made by Merlin.
Later, many clock, watch, and singing bird movements were
made for Cox by the Jaquet Droz firm. Cox earned great renown
through the Museum he maintained in London's Spring Gardens
from 1772 to 1775. It was a lavish venue draped with crimson
curtains, whose ceilings were decorated with "chiaroscuro
paintings of the liberal arts", by a "celebrated artist" of the
day, probably Angelica Kauffmann. In 1769, Cox purchased the
Chelsea Porcelain Works, intending perhaps to further diversify his
trade it has been suggested that he planned to collaborate with
Matthew Boulton in the making of ormulu-mounted porcelain
vases. However, for reasons that remain unknown but may have
to do with Cox' s persistently precarious financial situation, the
porcelain works were sold again only five months later. Both
profits and demand continued to decline, and Cox soon found
himself in difficult financial straits, with insufficent cash at hand,
and a large stock in which he had invested hugely. To remedy this
situation, Cox held two sales of items from his stock at Christie's,
in July and December 1772. In addition, early that same year he
had opened his mechanical museum in the Great Room at Spring
Gardens. For the three years of its existence, "Cox?s Museum" -
with its astonishingly high entrance fee of half a guinea - was the
talk of London. James Boswell, who went to see it in April 1774
at the insistance of Dr Johnson, found it "a very fine exhibition"
for "power of mechanism and splendour of show", while Fanny
Burney considered it impressive but somewhat shallow.