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Theseus French Empire Mantle Clock by André Antoine Ravrio

Theseus French Empire Mantle Clock by André Antoine Ravrio

$54,500.00
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Details
Theseus French Empire Mantel Clock
André Antoine Ravrio
Circa 1800

This monumental Empire mantel clock by André Antoine Ravrio, whose case is crafted entirely of gilded bronze, is quite exceptional. It is one of only four known examples. Of the other three, one is held in a private collection, another resides in the Mobilier National in Paris, and the third belongs to the museum collection of the Prince de la Moskowa.

Commissioned during Napoleon's reign, the case was crafted by the emperor's personal bronzier, André Antoine Ravrio, and the mechanism by the Emperor’s clockmaker, Bazile-Charles Le Roy. The clock seamlessly marries the grandeur of Napoleon's modern empire with the timeless glory of Ancient Greece. The case itself is a work of art, as Ravrio masterfully presents one of ancient Greece’s most iconic tales. To the left, the ingenious inventor Daedalus is shown drafting his plans for King Minos’s labyrinth, built to contain the fearsome Minotaur. To the right stands the hero Theseus, captured at the pivotal moment when Ariadne, the king’s daughter, offers him a ball of thread—the key to finding his way out after confronting the monster. Sword in hand, he prepares for his fateful encounter.

Their pivotal exchange unfolds atop a pedestal adorned with a bronze frieze depicting Theseus’s triumph over the Minotaur. In this enduring myth, the Athenian hero enters the labyrinth to defeat the creature that demands human sacrifice, ultimately freeing Athens from its cruel tribute. Together, these scenes narrate the timeless story of courage, love and liberation.

Every element of this clock is a work of art, the result of a collaboration between the finest bronzier and clockmaker of the period. The enameled clock dial, signed "Le Roy br. de Madame/A Paris," features Roman numeral hour markers and minute graduations. Bazile-Charles Le Roy, founder of the prestigious Le Roy company in 1785 at the Palais Royal, relocated to Rue de la Egalité after 1789, later becoming the official clockmaker to Napoleon's mother.

André Antoine Ravrio (1759–1814), renowned for his lamps, girandoles, clocks and bronze mounts, was awarded a Silver Medal at the 1806 Exposition de l'Industrie in Paris. By 1810, he had been appointed bronzier to Napoleon, working at several imperial residences, including Saint-Cloud, Compiègne and the Tuileries. At the height of his career, Ravrio's workshop employed as many as 100 artisans, producing designs coveted for their ingenious integration of form and exceptional quality, and this clock is the very finest example known on the market.

25" high x 23 1/8" wide x 9" deep 

Provenance:
Mrs. E.P. Corbin, from 1949 in New York
Private collection, Bath, England
M.S. Rau, New Orleans

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