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Musical Automaton

On display in:

East Gallery

Order image © All images subject to copyright

artist or maker

Martinet, Hubert (active 1770-1790)

Date

1768?-1772

see commentary for dating

Place of production

  • London, England, United Kingdom

Medium

  • chased bronze, with gilt-bronze, patinated bronze, and polychrome oil paint, ornamented with white, red, green, blue and yellow paste, mother of pearl and glass covers, carved oak base

Type of object

  • automata

Accession number

2202

Musical automaton built in two parts. The upper part is in the form of an elephant supporting a howdah (seat with a canopy). The base is rectangular and contains the musical movement.

On top of the elephant, the howdah sits on a shabrack (saddle-cloth) with revolving serpentine wheels on each side. It has a siren or Nereid at each of its lower corners. It terminates at the top in a square castellated tower with canted corners which is mounted with twelve cannons. The howdah is mounted on the front and back with stylized revolving flower-heads behind domed glass covers. A bearded man in a turban holding a sword and mace stands on the top of the tower shaded by a canopy held by two servants with floral robes. On either side of the howdah are circular glazed windows opening on to architectural façades pierced in the centre of each with a rectangular aperture past which six Roman warriors rotate once in fifty seconds.

The elephant stands on a pierced rocky platform sparsely covered with vegetation and inhabited by snails, wyverns, a beetle, moths, and shells. Around the platform, standing at each corner on a revolving plate, is an Oriental figure playing a musical instrument. Between these figures, on either side, are two revolving flowers of differing designs, each mounted on a tree stump, which flank a vase of flowers. Surrounding the platform, there are also a lion, a crocodile, wyverns, snails, shells, and a lizard.

The sides of the rectangular base containing the musical movement are chased with rocks and plants; they incline inwards slightly towards the top, and are mounted at each corner with a large wyvern and elsewhere with animals including serpents, snails, whelks, frogs, alligators, and insects.

The four sides of the base are each pierced with two apertures separated on the front and back by a roundel protected by a bombé glass cover, and on either side by a rocky support.

The roundel on the front contains ten revolving stars around which two serpents weave on a backplate engraved with floral trails. In the apertures flanking it a serpent coiled in the shape of a helical torch revolves against a painted background. The roundel on the back contains a griffon gazing at a revolving star of complex construction against a painted landscape which extends on either side and forms the background to the revolving serpent coils matching those on the front. In the apertures on the sides a procession of figures passes framed by a stage setting of differing architectural design and against a theatrical backdrop in painted relief, also of differing design.

Commentary

The elephant automaton was one of Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild's most admired treasures. It was mentioned in a local newspaper report of 1889 describing the visit of the Shah of Persia, who asked to see the mechanism perform again and again.

The elephant is operated by two keys inserted in the belly of the elephant and the base. The base plays a musical tune. The triumphal Emperor riding the elephant and the four musicians on the base move to and fro. The paste flowers, designed to imitate diamonds, rotate and open and close. Glass roundels in the base reveal revolving snakes and stars, as well as architectural scenes.

The automaton was made in London. It was reputed to have been made as a gift for an Indian official given by the French or English East India Company to cement a political or commercial alliance. Although this is unlikely, entrepreneurs such as the famous jeweller James Cox did make these complex automata, known as 'sing-songs', for rulers in India and China (see Roger Smith, 'The Sing-Song Trade: Exporting clocks to China in the Eighteenth Century', "Antiquarian Horology", March 2008, pp. 629-58). Cox organised teams of craftsmen to make these items. Several elephant clocks signed by different makers can be found in Asia but also in Europe. Automata and gadgetry were popular with 18th-century European rulers too. Makers in Britain, Germany, France and Switzerland specialised in developing ingenious mechanical toys.

It seems that the maker, Hubert Martinet, did not find a ready buyer for the elephant. It was displayed several times in London, and probably is also the elephant displayed later in the Netherlands and Paris, for the delight of the paying public (Mart van de Weil, correspondence, 2017, for Dutch provenance information). The style and quality of the craftsmanship suggests Martinet may have employed French craftsmen or their designs to construct this elaborate wonder.

Roger Smith (correspondence, 2011) has dated the automaton to 1768-1772 based on some of the decoration executed in a classical Greek style. There is little direct evidence for how long these complex machines took to make. Tietz (1853) argued that it took ten years, however Martinet, like Cox and other makers, was not a solitary inventor but a businessman-entrepreneur, and ten years would not have made commercial sense. Two to five years is probably more realistic.

It is not surprising that Ferdinand, with his well-informed knowledge of 18th-century decorative arts, should have acquired such an object. A famous elephant, almost certainly the Waddesdon example, was displayed in a travelling museum in Amsterdam, Haarlem and Arnhem in 1874, advertised as being a favourite with royalty (see Noord-Hollands Archief, Collection Museum Enschedé, inv. No. 1591).

Phillippa Plock, 2017

Physical description

Dimensions (mm) / weight (mg)

1371 x 851 x 638

Marks

H. MARTINET F.
Maker's mark
on the elephant's trunk between the tusks, lettered in paste, in imitation of diamonds

Inscriptions

vorn
Inscription
on the reverse of two sections of the howdah, scratched

Daniel heu[se?]r
uhrmacher in Barmen
7. [?] 1829
Vorn
Inscription
on one of two main plates of driving mechanism inside the elephant

H Koistinen
Danzig
1856
H Koistinen
Hamburg
1864
Inscription
on one of two main plates of driving mechanism inside the elephant

Urmacher in Leipzig 1875
Inscription
on one of two main plates of driving mechanism inside the elephant

H P Schelpff Urmacher in Amsterdam 1835
Inscription
on one of two main plates of driving mechanism inside the elephant

7 m 1827 Journal ... Meister In Lurnum
Inscription
on one of two main plates of driving mechanism inside the elephant

Translation of inscription

front [vorn]

Labels

TO BE KEPT DRY
Repaired and put in order 1925 by
HENRY J HATFIELD & SONS Ltd.,
Telephone Museum 3741
86 & 88 CHARLOTTE ST., FITZROY SQ., LONDON
Printed label
underside of the top of the lower stage, partly printed and partly ink inscribed label

History

Provenance

  • Possibly (but unlikely) made for the East India Company as a present for a high ranking official in the Maratha Empire in Pune in the province of Visapur, India; probably displayed at Messrs Masquerier and Peregal's goldsmiths' and jewellers, and toymen, The Ring and Pearl, No. 11, Coventry Street, St. James's, London in February 1772; possibly bought by the French Government between 1800-1830; probably owned by Pierre Ferzi who appears to have displayed it in the Netherlands in 1830-31; probably then owned by Georges Tietz, Rheims by 1851 who appears to have displayed it in the Netherlands and Paris 1851-1853; almost certainly then acquired by H. Kaschner, who displayed the automaton in his travelling museum in Arnhem, Haarlem and Amsterdam in 1874; acquired by Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild (b.1839, d.1898) sometime before 1889; inherited by his sister Alice de Rothschild (b.1847, d.1922); inherited by her great-nephew James de Rothschild (b.1878, d.1957); bequeathed to Waddesdon (National Trust) in 1957.

Collection

  • Waddesdon (National Trust)
  • Bequest of James de Rothschild, 1957
Bibliography

Bibliography

  • Gazeteer and New Daily Advertiser; 13 February 1772; probable mention of elephant on public display.
  • Charlotte Augusta, Princess of Wales, Robert Huish; Memoirs of her late royal highness Charlotte Augusta Princess of Wales etc; London; Thomas Kelly; 1818; possibly mentions the elephant according to Tietz (1853) and Kaschner 1874 leaflet (inv. no. NL-HlmNHA_2484_1591_03) (cites p. 425), but can find no reference.
  • Anon; Ouvrages en Horologie, connus sous le nom de Triomphe du Grand Mogol; Paris; [n. pub.]; 1800-1850?; Hand-bill kept at the British Horological Institute library, probably referring to this piece.
  • Unknown, P. Ferzi, Dagblad van 's Gravenhage, 10 May 1830, 4; p. 4; probably this elephant on public display by Ferzi in The Hague.
  • Unknown, Lees Hier, Leeuwarder courant, 15 July 1831, 21; p. 21; probably this elephant on public display by Ferzi in Leeuwarden.
  • Unknown, Beweegbare wasfiguren, automaten en de mechanische olifant, Algemeen Handelsblad, 19 September 1851, 25; p. 25; probably this elephant on public display by Tietz in Amsterdam.
  • Georges Tietz; Description du musée mécanique de Georges Tietz, contenant l'éléphant mécanique d'O' Martinet, et tableaux de l'histoire moderne et de la Bible; Rheims; Maréchal-Gruat; 1853; no. 1; probably the same elephant, with details that took 10 years to make.
  • Unknown, De Beroemde Mechanische Olifant, Arnhemsche courant, 26 August 1874, 13; p. 13; probably this elephant on public display in Arnhem by Kaschner.
  • Unknown, Standplaats Kaasplein, Algemeen Handelsblad, 17 September 1874, 20; p. 20; probably this elephant on public display in Amsterdam by Kaschner.
  • Bucks Herald; 13 July 1889; p. 7.
  • Geoffrey de Bellaigue, Anthony Blunt; Furniture Clocks and Gilt Bronzes: The James A de Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor; 2 vols; Fribourg; Office du Livre; 1974; vol. 1, pp. 140-145, cat. no. 28. ill.
  • ♦; Arthur Ord-Hume, The Elephant Automaton at Waddesdon Manor, Music & Automata, September 1989, 230-239; pp. 230-239.
  • ♦; Bonhams; Fine Clocks, Scientific Instruments and Barometers, Tuesday 28 May 2003; May 2003; London; p. 79, ill.
  • Richard Redding Antiques Ltd: Masterpieces of the Past; Zurich; Richard Redding Antiques; 2009; p. 14.
  • Roger Smith; The Waddesdon Elephant - Further notes on its early provenance, Paper presented at The Waddesdon Automata Symposium; September 2009; n. p.
  • ♦; Godfrey Curtis, Friends Visit to Waddesdon Manor, Friends Of The Clockmakers' Museum; Newsletter, 2010, 4-5; pp. 4-5
  • Sotheby's Publications; Treasures: Princely Taste, 4 July 2012; 2012; London; lot 24, fig. 4.

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