Title: Mantel clock with a priestess and Cupid offering a sacriffice to Venus
Creator: Joseph Buzot
Creator Nationality: French
Creator Gender: Male
Date Created: France, Louis XVI (r. 1774-1793)
Location: Paris, France
Physical Dimensions: w29.5 x h43 x d13.2 mm (work)
Label Copy: This lavish mantel clock is surmounted by a scene of ritual sacrifice cast in gilded bronze. A priestess in long, flowing robes stands to one side of the clock dial and holds a small dish in her left hand from which she pours oil to anoint a sacrificial dove held by Cupid. Between them sits on a small altar inscribed “Altar of Venus” on which blazes a fire for immolating the dove. The elaborately sculptural character of this scene and the fine materials reveal this clock to have been made for a member of the French aristocracy in pre-Revolutionary France.
The clock was produced by the master clockmaker Joseph Buzot, whose father and brother specialized in the making of springs for the many watch- and clockmakers active in Paris. Joseph manufactured the movement of this clock and signed the dial, but he subcontracted the work for the ebony base and bronze figures, a practice typical for the period.