‘It’s been a
lot of detective work’: Madame de Pompadour’s £1m wall lights discovered in
Yorkshire hotel
Four
gilt-bronze sconces that lit up home of Louis XV’s mistress are set to go on
sale at Sotheby’s in December
Kim Willsher
in Paris
Sun 24 Nov
2024 07.00 GMT
For almost
140 years, four massive gilt-bronze wall lights have hung in the 18th-century
drawing room at Swinton Castle in Yorkshire, now an opulent luxury hotel.
Guests will
almost certainly have noticed the one metre-high rococo appliques with their
entwined branches decorated with leaves, berries and cherubim, and passed them
off as impressive reproductions of more valuable original works.
“They would
have known they were good, but not how good,” said João Magalhães, a French and
Italian furniture specialist. Now, auction house Sotheby’s believes it has
uncovered missing treasure after tracing the lights’ history from the grand
salon of French king Louis XV’s mistress Madame de Pompadour, through
generations of European aristocracy.
Magalhães
believes the appliques were created by master sculptor Jacques Caffieri. He
linked them to two chandeliers made by the artisan who was attached to the
French royal household in the 18th century, bearing the same decoration and
acquired by de Pompadour.
Although the
four wall lights at Swinton are not signed, they bear all the stylistic
hallmarks of Caffieri’s work. After nine months scouring French sale receipts
and inventory records, Magalhães says he has traced the sconces back to Madame
de Pompadour’s homes, first at the Versailles Palace, and then at the Château
de Crécy at Dreux, west of Paris, a beautiful estate gifted by the king.
“It has been
a lot of detective work and a little supposition based on facts. We know they
are very similar to the chandeliers and we know the chandeliers were moved back
and forth with four wall lights. It is difficult to see how the lights we have
are not the same lights in the inventories,” Magalhães told the Observer.
Jeanne-Antoinette
Poisson, the Marquise of Pompadour – known as Madame de Pompadour – was the
official chief mistress of Louis XV as well as his aide and adviser. She was a
major political figure in the royal court at Versailles and patron of the
decorative arts and architecture, sponsoring many Enlightenment philosophers
and writers, including Voltaire. She played a central role in making Paris the
European capital of taste and culture, and established the Sèvres porcelain
factory, celebrated across the continent.
Even after
her sexual relationship with the king ended and he took younger mistresses,
Louis XV remained devoted to her through the ill health of her later years
until her death from tuberculosis aged 42 in 1764.
De Pompadour
was an enthusiastic proponent of the extremely ornamental and dramatic rococo
style, also known as late baroque, that emerged in France in the 1730s, and she
filled the 15 residences she owned with such artefacts and furnishings.
At the
Château de Crécy, she could escape the pressures of the royal court and host
long visits from the king as well as intellectuals, writers and artists. Her
Grand Salon d’Assemblée was more than 16m long and 8.5m wide, requiring
furnishings that measured up to its impressive size.
“Madame de
Pompadour’s grand salon at Crecy was dedicated to the arts, and we know she
decorated the salon in rococo style. Unfortunately, very few pieces from this
salon have survived,” Magalhães said.
In 1757, de
Pompadour sold the Château de Crécy and its contents to the Duc de Penthièvre,
the grandson of King Louis XIV known for his vast wealth, philanthropy and
involvement in French naval affairs. De Penthiève’s properties and belongings
were seized during the 1789 revolution. All trace of the wall lights was lost
until they reappeared on the other side of the Channel in 1844 in the South
Drawing Room of the 2nd Earl of Lonsdale’s home in London.
Lonsdale, a
prolific buyer of French furniture and Sèvres porcelain, was a close friend of
British king George IV. Around 1887, the lights were sold at auction for £1,280
and relocated to the 200-acre Swinton estate, north of Leeds, where they have
remained, one pair placed either side of the drawing room fireplace.
The wall
lights, estimated at up to £1m, will be sold at Sotheby’s annual Treasures
auction in London on 4 December.
“Objects
like this don’t come around every month. They are very beautiful, absolutely
amazing; monumental in terms of their scale, quality and the boldness of
design,” Magalhães said.
“They scream
of a great patron of the arts, and Madame de Pompadour was certainly that.”
“We see some
extraordinary things in this business, but every now and again there is
something that just stops you in your tracks. Seeing these wall lights was one
such moment.”
Pair of 1752 gilt-bronze andirons by Caffieri, in the
Cleveland Museum of Art
Jacques
Caffieri (25 August 1678, Paris – 25 November 1755, Paris) was a French
sculptor, working for the most part in bronze.
Jacques
Caffiéri was the fifth son of Philippe Caffieri (1634-1716), the founder of
this family of artists. Jacques was received a maître fondeur-ciseleur by 1715,
the date of his first known work, a design for a pall for the Corporation des
Fondeurs-Ciseleurs, one of two Parisian guilds that oversaw works cast in
metal, from full-scale sculptures to gilt-bronze furniture mounts, wall-lights
and candlesticks. As fondeurs-ciseleurs, "casters and finishers", the
renown of the Caffieri family has centred on Jacques, though later it is not
easy to distinguish between Jacques' work and that of Jacques' son, the younger
Philippe (1714–1777).
Caffieri was
attached as fondeur-ciseleur to the Bâtiments du Roi in 1736. A large
proportion of his brilliant achievement as a designer and chaser in bronze and
other metals was executed for the crown at Versailles, Fontainebleau, Marly,
Compiègne, Choisy and the Château de La Muette, and the crown, ever in his
debt, still owed him money at his death. Philippe and his son Jacques
undoubtedly worked together in the Appartement du Dauphin at Versailles, and
although much of their contribution has disappeared, the gilt-bronze
decorations of the marble chimney-piece still remain. They belong to the best
of full-blown Rococo style; vigorous and graceful in design, they are executed
with splendid skill.
After the
elder Philippe's death in 1716, Jacques continued to work for the crown, but
had many private clients. From the Caffieri workshop in rue des Canettes came
an amazing amount of work, chiefly in the shape of those gilt-bronze furniture
mounts which adorned furniture by the best ébénistes of Paris. Little of his
achievement was ordinary; an astonishingly large proportion of it is famous. In
the Wallace Collection, London,[1] is the royal commode delivered by
Antoine-Robert Gaudreau, ébéniste du Roi, in 1739 for Louis XV's bedchamber at
Versailles: it is richly mounted with an integrated series of corner mounts,
chutes and sabots, and the drawer-fronts and a single composition into which
the handles are fully integrated. It must have been the result of close
cooperation between Caffiéri and Gaudreau, who was responsible for the veneered
carcase. In 1747 Caffiéri supplied gilt-bronze mounts for the marble
chimneypiece in the Dauphin's bedroom at Versailles. Caffieri also produced
gilt-bronze cases for clocks, both mantel clocks and the cartel clocks that
combined clock and bracket in one unified design, to be mounted on a wall. A
detailed inventory of the Caffieri workshop made in 1747 enables scholars to
identify some unsigned clockcases from the workshop: a fully Rococo cartel
clock with a movement by Julien Le Roy is at the Getty Museum: it is inscribed
fait par Caffiery in a cartouche below the dial.
In 1740,
Caffieri's wife purchased a royal privilege, which allowed the Caffieri
workshop to gild bronze as well as cast it within the same workshop; ordinarily
the processes were divided between two Parisian corporations, jealous of their
jurisdictions, the fondeurs-ciseleurs and the ciseleurs-doreurs.
His
signature incised in gilt-bronze kept his name alive in the nineteenth century
and gained him an entry in Encyclopædia Britannica 1911, though the extreme
Rococo style of which he was a consummate master laid his work open to
disapproving commentary. Two monumental gilt-bronze chandeliers in the Wallace
Collection, London, bear his signature; one of them was a wedding present from
Louis XV to Louise-Elisabeth of France in 1739; the other is signed and dated
1751. The famous astronomical clock made by C.-S. Passement and Dauthiau for
Louis XV, 1749–1753, is housed in a Rococo case signed by Caffieri. Another
clock, with a movement by Balthasar Martinot in an extreme Rococo style
gilt-bronze case, belongs to the Duke of Buccleuch, at Boughton House A pair of
fire-dogs signed and dated 1752 is in the Cleveland Museum of Art Two large
gilt-bronze mirror-frames by Caffieri, to a design by Ange-Jacques Gabriel,
were intended as a gift to the Sultan of Turkey; the price was an astonishing
24,982 livres.
He made a
great cross and six candlesticks for the high altar of Notre-Dame de Paris,
which disappeared in the French Revolution, but similar work for Bayeux
Cathedral still exists. A wonderful enamelled toilet set which he executed for
the Princess of Asturias has also disappeared.
In 1737 and
1735 respectively, Jacques Caffieri cast the busts of Jean Victor de Besenval
de Brunstatt (1671–1736) and of his late father, Jean Victor Pierre Joseph
Besenval (1638–1713). The busts, at least one of which was part of the
collection of Pierre Victor, Baron de Besenval de Brunstatt, according to Louis
Abel de Bonafous, Abbé de Fontenay (1737–1806), it was the bust that showed the
baron's father, Jean Victor de Besenval de Brunstatt, and which the baron kept
in his cabinet at the Hôtel de Besenval, were both shown at the exhibition
L’Art Français sous Louis XIV et sous Louis XV, which was held in Paris in 1888.
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