Importantes Montres de Collection

Geneva, Nov 13, 2011

LOT 477

DENOYELLE, DIANA AU REPOS Denoyelle A Paris. Made circa 1789. Very fine and rare, Louis XVI, carved white and black marble and gilt-bronze, 8-day going, hour and half-hour striking mantel clock with duo-date calendar, moon phases, pin-wheel escapement and enamel dial by Muret.

CHF 14,000 - 18,000

USD 15,000 - 20,000 / EUR 12,000 - 15,000

Sold: CHF 17,500

C. rectangular black marble base, the front inset with a gilt-bronze relief plaque depicting cherubs at play, fl anked by gilt-bronze paterae, gilt bronze feet, white marble case carved as a rock, to the left the gilt-bronze fi gue of Diana in repose, dead birds at her feet, to the right, a gilt-bronze bird on a branch, a dog on its hind legs in persuit, a serpent around the base, beaded giltbronze bezel. D. Convex white enamel by Muret, Arabic numerals, outer dot minute divisions, blue 15-minuet numerals, outermost red date numerals, inner days of the week, aperture for the painted on enamel moon phases with lunar calendar on the periphery. Fine pierced gilt-brass hands, steel arrow calendar hands. M. Circular gilt-brass with fl at-bottom plates, large going barrels for both trains, pin-wheel escapement, silk suspension, striking the hours and half-hours on a bell with outside countwheel. Dial signed. Dim. 48 x 42 x 19 cm.


LOADING IMAGES
Click to full view
Image

Grading System
Grade: AA

Very good

Case: 3-24-29

Good

Slightly chipped

Lacking elements

Movement: 3*

Good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 3-24-01

Good

Slightly chipped

HANDS Original

Notes

Denoyelle Ferdinand-Philippe Denoyelle, maitre in 1788. He worked in Rue du Coq Saint-Honore in 1789. The present clock is almost certainly the same one mentioned in Tardy ?relevée sur une pendule fi n Louis XV, en marbre blanc. Femme Pleurant un oiseau mort, un amour en apporte un autre vivant?. This cloc kwas sold in 1911 for 10,000 French Francs. The Pin-Wheel Escapement This escapement was particularly popular in France and was invented by Louis Amant in 1741. The teeth of the escape wheel are replaced by pins standing vertically from the plane of the wheel. A swinging pair of levers attached to the pendulum allows the pins to ?escape? one by one; this also impulses the pendulum. The pin-wheel escapement is quite accurate and only needs a small pendulum arc making it suitable for precision clocks