Josef Hoffman
Mantle clock
Bel Etage, Wolfgang Bauer, Vienna
Date 1903
Period Early 20th century
Dimension 34 x 33 x 27 cm (13³/₈ x 13 x 10⁵/₈ inches)
Designed by: Josef Hoffmann, 1903
Executed by: Wiener Werkstätte, model no. M 0005
Marked: JH, WW in oval, monogram KK (silversmith Karl Kallert), rose mark
Copper, chased and hammered, original patina, eight alabaster columns,
two columns restored, alpaca dial with enamelled numerals, bevelled and cut glass, capital with gemstone, one week movement with ½ hour and hour strike on bell, movement has been overhauled by an expert clockmaker, delicately cleaned, first class original condition.
Chased and hammered copper, original patina, eight alabaster columns, two columns restored, alpaca dial with enamelled numerals, faceted and cut glass, chapter with gemstone, week movement with ½ hour and hour strike on bell, movement overhauled by specialist, delicately cleaned, first-class original condition.
H 34 cm, W 33 cm, D 27 cm
According to the Wiener Werkstätte archives, only two such clocks were manufactured in 1903, the founding year of Wiener Werkstätte: one for Dr. Spitzer and the other for the Kohn company.
This clock is one of the few large and iconic objects, made in the founding year of Wiener Werkstätte, that are again available. Only two such clocks have ever been executed, one silver-plated in copper and the other patinated in copper. Both clocks were sold to wealthy Viennese figures very close to Josef Hoffmann and Wiener Werkstätte. The alpaca clock was acquired by the Kohn family, the clock we are offering by the Spitzer family, for whom Hoffmann had already designed and furnished a house in the Hohe Warte villa colony in 1900.
Date: 1903
Period: Early 20th century
Dimension: 34 x 33 x 27 cm (13³/₈ x 13 x 10⁵/₈ inches)
Provenance: private property, Austria
Literature:
Wiener Werkstätte photo archives at the Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna, photo inv. no. WWF-97-1-1, model no. M 0005.
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