Details
A PAIR OF FRENCH SILVER-PLATED FIVE-LIGHT CANDELABRA
19TH CENTURY
Each on a pedestal base applied on two sides with female figures and to the front with a burning athenienne, the stem in the form of a classically-clad figure of Victory holding a pair of flaming torches and supporting five scrolling branches with eagle terminal supporting palmette-cast sockets
25 ¼ in. (64 cm.) high

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Adrian Hume-Sayer
Adrian Hume-Sayer

Lot Essay

The model for these candelabra in the French neo-classical style was created around 1795 in bronze. A pair with three branches from the collection of Pauline Borghese, now in the British Government at the British Embassy in Paris, were purchased in 1815 by the Duke of Wellington. Further examples are in Schloss Homburg, Hesse, and illustrated in Léon de Groeber, Decorative Arts in Europe, 1790-1850, p. 171, displayed on a console made for King Jerome, the brother of Napoleon and Pauline Borghese. A third pair can be found in the Palacio Real de Aranjuez, near Madrid; while the only example with five lights is at Schloss Nymphenburg, Munich, where they lack the torches.

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