View full screen - View 1 of Lot 61. A jade, gold, enamel, and mother-of-pearl desk timepiece, Circa 1920 | 巴黎卡地亞 玉石、黃金、琺瑯及珠母貝座鐘,製作年份約 1920.

Cartier, Paris

A jade, gold, enamel, and mother-of-pearl desk timepiece, Circa 1920 | 巴黎卡地亞 玉石、黃金、琺瑯及珠母貝座鐘,製作年份約 1920

Auction Closed

December 9, 06:25 PM GMT

Estimate

50,000 - 80,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Cartier, Paris


A jade, gold, enamel, and mother-of-pearl desk timepiece, Circa 1920 


巴黎卡地亞 玉石、黃金、琺瑯及珠母貝座鐘,製作年份約 1920


Dial: laque burgauté panel depicting a Chinoiserie scene

Caliber: mechanical 

Case: open work chapter ring with red enamel Roman numerals, the nephrite molded square case including four carved jadeite spandrels within gold frames, gilt metal case back and easel stand 

Case number: stand signed Cartier 2146 Paris, case back stamped 0671

Size: 74 mm width 

Box: no

Papers: no

The present lot is inspired by the Far East and features a attractive laque burgauté dial depicting a Scholar in his garden. Laque burgauté refers to the exquisite East Asian technique of decorating lacquer with intricate inlays of tinted mother-of-pearl, often engraved and combined with gold and silver foil. The technique probably originated in China as early as the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and was very popular during the Qing dynasty (1644-1911/12) and spread to the Ryukyu Islands between China and Japan and thence to Japan itself. In China the technique is called 'lo tien' and in Japan, 'aogai'. The Western name is derived from the French - sea-ear or mussel (burgau) and lacquer (laque or lac). Most of the lacquer used by Cartier in their art deco objects is likely to have been made in Ryukyu or in Japan.


For similar examples of Cartier desk timepieces of Chinese inspiration, see Barracca, J., Negretti, G. and Nencini, F., Le Temps de Cartier, pp. 108, 167, 169, 172-3 and 176.