Rare Sèvres ice-cooler (glacière
or seau à glace à trépied) with
floral polychrome decoration on a white ground and gold and platinum decoration
on a black ground. The hemispherical container
is glazed white on the interior and is supported by four rectangular legs headed
with leopard masks bearing rings, in two-colored gilding, and resting on gilded
leopard paws. The piece is raised on an eight-sided plinth with four long
concave sides and four short convex sides below the leopard paws. The outside lower
portion of the piece is decorated with polychrome floral vines with gilded
outlines on a white ground. The upper portion is decorated with a Chinoiserie landscape
with figures delineated in tones of gilding and platinum on a rare black
ground. [Possibly originally with a top. Gilding on top rim worn. Slight wear
to gilding on sculptural elements. Chip to rim.]
The form was designed by
Louis Le Masson (1743-1829) to be used in the Service Arabesque, begun at Sèvres in 1783 for Louis XVI. The
service was created in a very advanced neo-classical style, with the painted
decoration derived from Raphael’s Loggia in the Vatican. The form of the
ice-cooler was based on a Roman tripod stand.
Well painted crossed “L’s”
mark under plinth
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