Details
Rectangulaire aux coins arrondis, à décor en mosaïque cloisonné de quatre-feuilles, baies et filets en agate, lapis-lazuli et aventurine sur fond de jaspe sanguin, signé sur la gorge FOSSIN & FILS, JOAILLIERS DU ROI, À PARIS, poinçons dans le couvercle et le fond : 3e titre1819-1838, garantie et orfèvre ; sur le gorge du couvercle : 3e titre1819-1838, garantie, orfèvre et contrôle postérieur
L. 8,5 cm. (338 in.)
poids brut 142 gr. (4 oz. 11 dwt.)
FURTHER DETAILS
A FRENCH RESTAURATION GOLD-MOUNTED MOSAIC HARDSTONES SNUFF-BOX, BY JEAN-BAPTISTE FOSSIN, PARIS, 1825-1838
Rectangular with rounded corners, decorated with panels of bloodstone and white agate bands, at each corner a mosaic of white agate quatrefoils and aventurine berries on lapis-lazuli ground, signed on flange FOSSIN & FILS, JOAILLIERS DU ROI, À PARIS, marked in cover and base: third gold standard 1819-1838, guarantee and maker; on cover flange: third gold standard 1819-1838, guarantee, maker and later control mark

Jean-Baptiste Fossin (1786-1848) created jewellery and objects in the Italian Renaissance taste, including Florentine pietra dura style pieces. Born in 1786, he started as workshop manager for Etienne Nitot, jeweller to the Emperor, before taking over the business in 1814-1815. His son Jules joined him in 1830, and they received the title of 'Joailliers du Roi’ from Louis-Philippe. In 1848 shortly after Fossin père’s retirement, Maison Fossin opened a shop in London, entrusting the workshop to Jean-Valentin Morel (1794-1860) attracting a prestigious clients that included Queen Victoria. In 1862 Jean-Baptiste Fossing retired and handed management of the company to Morel’s son Prosper. In 1885, Joseph Chaumet (1852–1928) married Marie, the daughter of Prosper Morel, thus taking control of the company changing the name to Chaumet.

The decoration of this box in cloisonné mosaic of hard stones is a style unique to Fossin that proved to be very popular in the context of the revival of the renaissance style. Fossin produced a small number of pieces, boxes and object of vertu in that style and one near identical snuff-box was sold at Sotheby's in Geneva on November 17, 1994, from the collections of King Farouk's Palace of Egypt dispersed in 1954, as well as the paperweight sold in the Bayreuth Collection in November 2023 in Paris, lot 126.
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Lot Essay

Jean-Baptiste Fossin (1786-1848) est connu pour avoir créé des bijoux et des objets dans le goût de la Renaissance italienne dont des pièces qui s'apparentent à la pietra dura florentine.
Né en 1786, il travaille comme chef d’atelier pour Etienne Nitot, joaillier de l’Empereur, et son fils François-Regnault avant de leur succéder en 1814-1815 et de reprendre l’affaire. Son fils Jules le rejoint en 1830 et ils reçoivent de Louis-Philippe le titre de joailliers du Roi. Jean-Baptiste se retire en 1845 et son fils cède la direction en 1862 à Prosper Morel, le fils de l’orfèvre Jean-Valentin Morel. Sa fille Marie épouse Joseph Chaumet, qui hérite de la maison en 1885.
Le décor de cette boîte en mosaïque cloisonnée de pierres dures est identique à celui de la tabatière vendue chez Sotheby’s à Genève le 17 novembre 1994, provenant des collections du Palais d’Egypte du Roi Farouk dispersées en 1954 ainsi que du presse-papier vendu dans la Collection Bayreuth en Novembre 2023 à Paris, lot 126.

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