Hooded wall clock with calendar

Clockmaker: Ahasuerus I Fromanteel British

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 509

Ahasuerus Fromanteel introduced the pendulum clock to England shortly after its invention by Dutch mathematician Christiaan Huygens in 1656. The use of the pendulum necessitated a new case form for the clock movement: early English pendulum clocks were housed in severely architectural wooden cases. The design of this clock, whose applied Doric columns supporting the architrave and pediment are of unusually pleasing proportions, may have been influenced by the work of the English architect Christopher Wren.

Hooded wall clock with calendar, Clockmaker: Ahasuerus I Fromanteel (British, Norwich, England 1607–1693), Case: ebony and oak veneered with ebony, ebonized wood, gilded brass; Dial: gilded brass with silvered-brass chapter ring; Movement: brass, steel, British, London

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