Object Description
A delightful little silver taperstick of plain early design with a knopped stem and shaped stepped foot. Cast silver.
Weight 124g, 4.6 troy oz.
Height 12.2cm. Base diameter 7.4cm.
London 1745.
Maker William Gould.
Sterling silver.
Marks. Stamped with a full set of English silver hallmarks in the four corners underneath the base.
Maker: William Gould
William Gould, apprenticed to his brother James Gould in 1724, entered his first mark as largeworker in 1732. Like his brother’s, his mark is found virtually on candlesticks alone. His greatest work bears the mark of William Alexander on the great Knesworth chandelier of the Fishmongers’ Company, of 1752. Since Alexander’s work is otherwise virtually unknown, it seems certain that he acted as sponsor for the piece and that Gould was the actual craftsman responsible for one of the greatest pieces of rococo silver surviving.
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