A Celebration of Art Deco: Masterworks from the Collection of Dr. Stephen E. Kelly Evening Sale
A Celebration of Art Deco: Masterworks from the Collection of Dr. Stephen E. Kelly Evening Sale
An Important Clock
Auction Closed
December 9, 11:37 PM GMT
Estimate
200,000 - 300,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Jean Goulden
An Important Clock
1928
silvered bronze, champlevé enamel
impressed JEAN GOULDEN LIV and dated 1928
14 1/8 x 10 1/8 x 4 7/8 in. (36 x 25.9 x 12.2 cm)
This unique clock is perhaps one of Jean Goulden’s most outstanding and large-scale achievements in the champlevé enamel technique. Perhaps one of his most celebrated works, this clock embodies the timeless artistry that made his work a symbol of the Jazz Age in France and overseas. Only 190 objects by Goulden are known to exist, making the present clock all the more special.
Goulden developed a practice that was truly singular amongst his peers in the Parisian avant-garde scene. Jean Goulden traveled to Macedonia as a military doctor during the first World War. There he discovered Byzantine art and was deeply influenced by the beauty of Byzantine enamelwork. Upon returning to Paris, he settled in a workshop in Montparnasse next door to Jean Lambert-Rucki where he painted and developed his unique artistic process with enamel. He became close friends with Jean Dunand and Jean-Louis Schmied with whom he realized a few exceptional collaborative pieces of furniture and book bindings. From 1921 onwards, Galerie Georges Petit held a number of highly successful group exhibitions of works by Dunand, Jouve, Schmied and Goulden. Working in enamel allowed Goulden to develop his unique artistic pursuit and revealed his passion for technical research. In the tradition of the great Art Deco artists who used only the finest materials, his preferred metals were silvered bronze and sterling silver.
His champlevé enamel technique is superbly represented here in the superimposition of turquoise and dark blue panels. Not only was Goulden an incredibly skilled technician, he was also an artist in his own right, creating stunning and complex compositions. This unique clock exhibits strong Cubist influences and Machine Age aesthetics in its construction, cleverly combining a variety of geometric forms with bright accent colors. Goulden created few objects as sophisticated as the present clock, a superlative example that rises to the level of an Art Deco masterpiece further evidenced by its rich exhibition history.