Auction details |
A late 17th or early 18th century bracket or table clock signed "Markwick, London". The Markwick family is known as one of the earliest of London’s clockmakers, with James Markwick being succeeded by James, presumably his son. The second James Markwick ascended into the Clockmakers Company of London in 1692, becoming a master in 1720, and it was he who sometimes signed his work as simply ”Markwick” like this example. This clock is late 17th or early 18th century.
Since the first clocks needed hanging weights to run, they had the problem of not being portable. Certainly one of the major advances in clock making in the late 1600s was the development of coiled mainsprings to drive the clock, making it possible to greatly reduce the clock's size and weight- making them portable. So these mainspring driven “bracket” or “chamber” or “table” clocks were ordinarily carried from room to room throughout the day by the handles mounted on top. Table clocks would run even if placed on the slightly un-level surface of a table or the floor; the feature of a “repeat” device (such as this example once had) would allow its insomniac owner to pull the clock’s night cord on his clock on the floor near the bed to hear the hours rung out at night when it was too dark to see the dial.
The first bracket clocks appeared in the late 1600s and were considered rare even in their own time, being something only those only the wealthiest could afford. Throughout the 18th century style changes were made to the mechanisms, dials and cases giving antiquarians a chance to date them with confidence. In addition to the dial signature, this example features a number of style examples that allow us to confirm its early 18th century date and London, England origin: a square engraved dial with a “false pendulum” aperture; a highly decorated and engraved backplate; an ebonized oak case; the patterns of the blued steel hands; the gilded “angel” spandrels; and the “basket top” feature, whose top is made from a pierced, chaste, and engraved bronze frame instead of wooden moldings.
A word on the term “basket top”. A basket top was a less than usual stylistic feature for bracket clocks confined to early 18th century examples. Our example has lost its gilded (gold) or silvered surface as have the repousse door mounts. The basket features a central St George trampling and spearing the dragon below him. The engraved back plate is of top quality with a pattern of flowing, flowering tulips, an influence of the Dutch whose clockmakers worked closely with their English partners during this period. The anchor escapement is an early conversion from the original crown wheel escapement; the four pineapple finials are later.
This early bracket clock comes to us with a provenance of having been through three generations without substantial restorations. It was purchased in the 1920s, and kept time in the offices of Industrialist Roy D. Chapin, Secretary of Commerce during the Hoover Administration. After that it was displayed in the library of the renowned Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan. Its lack of restorations for three generations is something sophisticated collectors appreciate: most prefer acquiring items of art and antiquity in “as found” condition, an assurance that there are no hidden restorations.
Condition reportUnless otherwise stated the condition of the mechanisms of these clocks is good, but that does not mean they run or do not need repairs. There is no guarantee of either the mechanical performance of clocks nor the completeness and originality of their parts and components. In most cases we have not removed the dials from these clocks, and have not checked inside for manufacturer’s or maker’s names for attribution.
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