Search this article.  Use 'Enter key' to find next. Use 'Home key' to search again.

A Royal Haagse Klok by Severijn Oosterwijck. Author: Keith Piggott.

A Royal 'HAAGSE KLOK'
by: Keith Piggott.

Keith Piggott.


APPENDIX 2                              Back to Main Document.

 

Recommendations for Conservation & Valuation.


Conservation is always a matter for the owner, or curator. Conservators are always bound by their client’s brief. Policies differ widely. Some will remove anachronistic additions, or replace lost fittings shown by witness marks. Others will simply stabilise the extant – whatever the final visual result. I recommend the excellent work by Mathew King and Matthew Read, on Fromanteel’s longcase, at The Museum of the History of Science at Oxford; also Matthew Read’s outstanding work, albeit to a more pro-active brief, on the Bowes Museum’s Silver Swan (that I knew as a boy) recognised as one of England’s spectacular Cultural Properties. His methods and photo-inventories are a model. Their joint lecture to the Antiquarian Horological Society proved a fascinating insight into Oxford's exciting Fromanteel clock, and the constraints of their briefs. I had earlier also reviewed that clock at first hand.

P
aul Shrouder has ably conserved Oosterwijck’s movement, returning it to running order while retaining the abused contrate and evidence of surface detail finishes so important to antiquarians as craft-signatures; we value these. In the past many horologists have arbitrarily rebuilt or over-cleaned some of our finest masterpieces, however the mood is changing. One ‘restorer’ left damning evidence of his own vandalism in Oosterwijck’s Royal Haagseklok.

Restorer’s inscriptions are cultural vandalism. Why would he inscribe, “I did not bump the bearings I did not touch them July 7,1970 (X)"? The ‘bearings’ (pivot holes to barrel and pin-wheel) probably were ‘bumped’ after the earlier accident. He also scribed the hour-wheel, “Lever added adjusted and repaired July 1970 (X)”. Paul Shrouder has seen his cryptic invoices; we believe the strike ‘lever’ is actually untouched, whereas the hammer ‘lever’ has evidence of alterations and is also wrongly located; probably reworked and moved in 1970. The hammer should be returned to its original pivots and its spring re-profiled to act under the hammer.  I should have those defacing inscriptions planished out. Restorer’s notes of ‘repairs’ are for detailed invoices or formal reports, certainly not on cultural object itself.


 

Oosterwijck’s unique clock has suffered accident and too long been overlooked. Its Ebony on Kingwood case is very important. Fortunately, box and frame are stable; there is no need for invasive dismantling of either. I would limit conservation to:

The Box

1   X-ray the hanging points for any broken screws;
replace iron* suspension rings.

Even in Coster’s oeuvre (1657-1659) there is no standard form, (compare D1, D2, D3, D4 D5, D8, and D10). Coster D1 has elongated steel eyelets, also seen on Coster's timepiece alarm D5, the nearest contemporary to Oosterwijck's Royal clock.

*Rust was found in the sockets.

2   Leave the two later peg holes as evidence for a pediment or crest being added.
3   Make good the solid show wood backboard; close the two drilled holes; re-glue the split.
4   Enclose the  two inner chopped-out sides of the box with matching Kingwood veneers.
5   Replace the damaged veneers fronting the dial-pins; repair the cracked and lifting ebony veneer around the lock mortice.
6   Remove the later steady strips nailed under the box, to end its “mantel-clock” status for good.

The Door

Tidy up and square off disturbed outer veneers at lower right corner.

I am pleased to be able to report that Mr. Mathew King has agreed to carry out this most sensitive conservation.


Valuation?

Financial interests were ruled out, but the owners would now insure their rare clock. Unrecorded early Hague clocks rarely appear, those with Royal provenance never have. In 1998, two unrecorded early Hague clocks by Pieter Visbagh surfaced in Ireland and were bought for Ł14,000- each, but were re-sold in Holland for more realistic sums. Lately, two Coster pendulums came to auction, in New York and Amsterdam. The first, 'D3', proved better than the trade allowed, (Sotheby's NY, Time Museum, Part.4, Vol.1, Lot.519, 13.10.2004), now at Zaanse Schans (see Appendix One). The latter, 'D5,' made a magnificent price, and to an English collector, too. (Christie's Amsterdam, 19 Dec. 2007).

But, the subject 'Royal Oosterwijck' is irreplaceable, literally! Any monetary valuation is subjective, mine reflects this antiquarian’s honest appreciation of its claims to priority and historic importance as a unique Dutch cultural property, a 'World Heritage Item'.

Copyright: R.K.Piggott, February 20, 2009.

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hit Counter