Hans Ottomeyer and Peter Pröschel, “Vergoldete Bronzen”, 1986, p. 364, pl. 5.12.6, illustrating a pair of ewers attributed to Claude Galle of almost identical design but instead of a frieze of maenads there are hippocampi above female figures on the ewer; the ewers forming a garniture with a vase-shaped clock of corresponding design.
Paul Marmottan, “Le Style Empire”, vol. III, 1925, pl. 22, illustrating the interior of the Petit Boudoir at La Malmaison, built for the Empress, showing a pair of extremely similar ewers placed on the mantelpiece before a mirror.
Hans Ottomeyer and Peter Pröschel, “Vergoldete Bronzen”, 1986, p. 364, pl. 5.12.6, illustrating a pair of ewers attributed to Claude Galle of almost identical design but instead of a frieze of maenads there are hippocampi above female figures on the ewer; the ewers forming a garniture with a vase-shaped clock of corresponding design.
Arcadi Gaydamak, “Russian Empire, Architecture, Decorative and Applied Arts, Interior Decoration 1800-1830”, 2000, p. 171, illustrating the Blue Sitting Room in the Yusupov Palace, St. Petersburg showing a pair of extremely similar gilt bronze ewers in front of a mirror on the mantelpiece.
An extremely fine and unusually large pair of Empire gilt and patinated bronze ewers attributed to Claude Galle of elongated baluster form mounted around the collar and base with stylized palmettes and acanthus leaves and centred around the body by a frieze of dancing maenads, the spout applied with a bearded male mask, the channelled and pearled scrolled handle supported on a putto mask and terminated above by a winged classical maiden clasping the rim, the whole on a spreading circular domed foot on a square gilt bronze base
Paris, date circa 1810
Height 74 cm, each.
This outstanding and unusually large pair of ewers can be attributed to Claude Galle (1759-1815), one of the foremost bronziers and fondeur-ciseleurs of the late Louis XVI and Empire periods, whose oeuvre included a number of smaller but near identical ewers. Among them is a pair at Pavlovsk Palace and at Yusupov Palace at St. Petersburg, a pair in the Ostankino Palace, Moscow and another in the Württemberg Landesmuseum, Stuttgart. A further comparable pair, owned during the nineteenth century by the Earls of Essex at Cassiobury Park, are almost certainly those sold from the Ojjeh Collection, Christie’s Monaco, 11-12th December 1999, lot 153.
Among the many distinguished works made by Galle were a number of other ewers as well as urns, vases and clock cases which, as here, had classical winged maidens surmounting or forming part of the handle. Among comparable examples is a pair illustrated in “Gli Splendori del Bronzo, Mobili e Oggetti d’Arredo tra Francia e Italia 1750-1850”, 2002, p. 140 no. 58 and also in Ottomeyer and Pröschel op. cit. p. 365, pl. 5.12.9. Works of this type proved particularly popular among English collectors but especially in Russia, where they were sometimes copied or inspired other luxury pieces by designers such as Andreï Voronikhin (1759-1814) and the bronzier Friedrich Bergenfeldt (1768-1822).
A leader in his field, Claude Galle was born at Villepreux near Versailles and then travelled to Paris to begin an apprenticeship under the fondeur, Pierre Foy. In 1784 Galle married Foy’s daughter and on his father-in-law’s death in 1788 Galle took over the workshop, which he built up into one the finest of its kind with a workforce of about 400 craftsmen. Galle promptly moved the business to Quai de la Monnaie (renamed Quai de 1’Unité) and from 1805 operated from 60 Rue Vivienne. First listed in the trade registers in 1784 he was received as a maître-fondeur in 1786 and promptly gained the first of many commissions from the Garde-Meublede la Couronne under Jean Hauré from 1786-88. He is known to have collaborated with Pierre-Philippe Thomire, amongst others, and was responsible for the majority of bronzes d’ameublement supplied during the Empire to Château de Fontainebleau. Other Imperial commissions included the supply of numerous vases, ewers, light fittings, figural clock cases and other fine bronze furnishings for the palaces at Saint-Cloud, the Trianons, Tuileries, Compiègne, Rambouillet and a number of the Italian palaces including Monte Cavallo, Rome and Stupinigi near Turin. Yet despite numerous important commissions Galle was often in debt, partly on account of his lavish life style and also since many of his clients, such as Prince Joseph Napoleon, failed to pay him. After his death Galle’s business was reopened and prospered under his son, Gérard-Jean Galle (1788-1846). His work can be found among the world’s finest collections including those mentioned above as well as the Musée National de Château de Malmaison, the Musée Marmottan in Paris, the Museo de Relojes at Jerez de la Frontera, the Residenz Munich and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.