STONE IV
STONE IV
France, circa 1875
Lot Closed
January 17, 03:25 PM GMT
Estimate
4,000 - 6,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
Attributed to Eugène Cornu (1827-1899)
France, circa 1875
Pair of vases
onyx, enamel, gilt-bronze; each with dragon head-cast handles and applied champlevé enamel decoration
30.5cm. high, 25.5cm. wide
The present pair of vases are a splendid example of Cornu's oeuvre in the decade of 1870's and are evocative of the rediscovery of new materials and decorative vocabularies influenced by the West’s expanding colonies and trade routes in the East in the 19th century. Indeed, the present example illustrates the popularity of Algerian alabaster - also known as onyx - as well as the ‘Japonisme’ style characterized by scrolls, cloud shapes, birds including peacocks and cranes, dragons, elephant heads and simulated bamboo.
A pair of similar vases also signed by Cornu were offered at Sotheby's, New York, 22 October 2008, lot 100.
Eugène Cornu
The sculptor and bronzier Eugène Cornu (d. 1875) was a prominent Parisian artist who enjoyed new mediums and had a particular interest in Algerian marble and onyx mines. Working closely with G. Viot, he exhibited extensively at the Paris Exposition Universelle of 1867. He also exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1874 and was a director of a bronze foundry as well as several other establishments in Paris. Amongst his numerous entreprises and partnerships, the one with G. Viot et Cie was the most successful and both were recorded at the premises of G. Viot & Cie. as 'Compagnie des Marbres Onyx D'Algérie', 24, boulevard des Italiens, Paris. They both had a huge success at the London 1862 and Paris 1867 Exposition Universelle, consequently winning the médaille d'or in 1867.