A SWEDISH ORMOLU-MOUNTED PORPHYRY (SVART BLYBERG) CAMPANA VASE
A SWEDISH ORMOLU-MOUNTED PORPHYRY (SVART BLYBERG) CAMPANA VASE

EARLY 19TH CENTURY

Details
A SWEDISH ORMOLU-MOUNTED PORPHYRY (SVART BLYBERG) CAMPANA VASE
EARLY 19TH CENTURY
With turned waisted socle, flanked by later German ram's head handles, on a square base, losses
49 cm. high

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Nikky Zwitserlood

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Lot Essay

A porphyry vase of identical design but without mounts stands in Prince Frederik Adolf's Anteroom in the Royal Palace, Stockholm (H. Groth, Neoclassicism in the North, London, 1990, p. 23).

The valley of Älvdalen (Elfdal) and its bordering parishes in Sweden appear to have been the only serious European mining sources for porphyry in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Mining started in the 1780's and the works were acquired by Charles XIV, the first of the Bernadotte Kings of Sweden, with the intention of introducing the splendour of the French Empire style to Sweden. During this time, many porphyry objects were distributed throughout Europe as diplomatic presents executed in a variety of types of porphyry. An inventory prepared for the Mining Intendance at Stockholm at the beginning of the 19th century lists at least twenty-two. Two of this variety are properly categorized as granitelle, the remaining twenty are named after the parishes of Älvdalen from where they were quarried: Blyberg, Dysberg, Bredvad, Orrlok, Klitt, etc. (see H. Sundblom and I. Tunander, Porphyre-La Pierre Royale, 1990, p. 2). The Älvdalen works were sold by the Royal Family in 1856 and were destroyed by fire ten years later. Subsequent production was sporadic and limited.

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