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Pocket Watch

Movement (act. ca. 1745–ca. 1755)
Date1750–55
MediumGold and enamel
Dimensions2 1/4 × 1 3/4 × 1 3/4 in. (5.7 × 4.4 × 4.4 cm)
Credit LineBequest of Winthrop Kellogg Edey, 1999
Accession number1999.6.25
Commentary

Throughout the eighteenth century, watches were appreciated as both timekeepers and wearable pieces of jewelry. The highly accurate movement of this watch is set in a gold case decorated with polychrome enamels that depict a bouquet of roses, carnations, and tulips tied with a blue ribbon. Widely cultivated in France at this time, these flowers were often represented on women’s clothing and objects. The hands of the watch are studded with jewels that resemble diamonds. The “fake” diamond, or rhinestone, was invented around 1730 by the Alsatian jeweler Georg Friedrich Strass. It was in great demand at the court of Louis XV, where Strass became the king’s jeweler in 1734. François Beeckaert, who signed this watch, became a master clockmaker in Paris in 1746.

Source: Vignon, Charlotte. The Frick Collection Decorative Arts Handbook. New York: The Frick Collection/Scala, 2015.

Not On View
Front view of watch with enamel dial in a gilt bronze case
Thomas Mudge
1757
Front view of Pocket Watch with enamel dial
Julien Le Roy
ca. 1750
Front image of Pocket Watch with Tourbillon showing the dial
Abraham-Louis Breguet
ca. 1820
Front view of pendant watch with an enamel dial
Dutertre
ca. 1765
Frontal view of Pendant Watch with enamed dial framed in gilt bronze
Chavannes le Jeune
ca. 1660
Front view of Pendant Watch with enameled polycrhome dial decorated in the center with an image…
Henry Arlaud
ca. 1685
Front view of Pendant Watch with delicate enameld polychrome decoration
C. De Lespée
ca. 1620
Front view of Double-Dial Desk Watch Showing Decimal and Traditional Time
Abraham-Louis Breguet
ca. 1795–after 1807
Candelabra with Figure of Zephyrus (One of a Pair)
Attributed to François Rémond
ca. 1790
Gilt bronze and bronze Candelabra with Figure of Flora (One of a Pair), front
Attributed to François Rémond
ca. 1790
Small enamel sculpture of the Christ child in a blessing
possibly 17th century or 19th century
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