Pair of Candlesticks

Getty Museum

Pair of Candlesticks

Creator

Etienne Martincourt

French Artist · 1791–1762

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Scholars know little about the life of Étienne Martincourt. Like many other bronze casters, he worked on the Right Bank of Paris, north of the Louvre, in a quarter that had been home to many bronze workers since the Middle Ages. After becoming a master in 1762, he was admitted to the Académie de Saint-Luc, a guild of decorative painters and sculptors. Membership in the guild of bronze casters and

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Date
about 1780
Medium
Gilt bronze
Culture
French
Department
Decorative Arts
Institution
Getty Museum

When lit, these candlesticks would have caught people’s eyes as the light glinted off the many details. The cherubs’ heads, with their pursed lips, perhaps reference the expression of someone blowing out a candle. The crisp, intricate garlands and leaves demonstrate the skill of the bronze chaser, the artist who hammered the cast bronze to create the details and finish the piece. The undersides bear the stamp of Étienne Martincourt, a celebrated bronze caster of the late 1700s. This candlestick design had lasting appeal. Many well-known collectors owned a similar pair, from the Duchesse de Mazarin in the late 1700s to merchant Léopold Double in the late 1800s. Artists in the 1800s made candlesticks inspired by and closely following this design.

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