Not currently on display at the V&A

Marriage necklace (thali)

Necklace
ca. 1850 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This South Indian marriage necklace is made of sheet gold pendants formed by hammering against a metal die, and adding minute motifs formed from gold wires or, again, by hammering against depressions cast into a metal block. The construction is therefore quite complex, but the finished work is extremely light. The form may be seen in an illustration to a study of South Indian jewellery written by E. B. Havell in 1894, showing typical jewellery found on the western coast of the southernmost tip of the subcontinent. He noted that jewellery from the Malabar coast and Trivandrum was very different from that worn to the east. The necklace was acquired by the Indian Museum in London in 1855 and was transferred to the South Kensington Museum, later renamed the Victoria and Albert Museum, in 1879.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleMarriage necklace (thali)
Materials and techniques
Sheet gold with applied wires and silk ties with gold beads
Brief description
A marriage necklace in sheet gold with applied wires, red silk ties and beads, South India, c. 1850.
Physical description
A marriage necklace (thali), sheet gold with applied wires and stamped motifs imitating granulation; the red silk ties with beads with twisted ribs.
Dimensions
  • Length: 30cm
Subject depicted
Summary
This South Indian marriage necklace is made of sheet gold pendants formed by hammering against a metal die, and adding minute motifs formed from gold wires or, again, by hammering against depressions cast into a metal block. The construction is therefore quite complex, but the finished work is extremely light. The form may be seen in an illustration to a study of South Indian jewellery written by E. B. Havell in 1894, showing typical jewellery found on the western coast of the southernmost tip of the subcontinent. He noted that jewellery from the Malabar coast and Trivandrum was very different from that worn to the east. The necklace was acquired by the Indian Museum in London in 1855 and was transferred to the South Kensington Museum, later renamed the Victoria and Albert Museum, in 1879.
Bibliographic references
  • Susan Stronge, Nima Smith, and J.C. Harle. A Golden Treasury : Jewellery from the Indian Subcontinent London : Victoria and Albert Museum in association with Mapin Publishing, Ahmedabad, 1988. ISBN: 0944142168 p 79
  • Thomas Holbein Hendley, Indian Jewellery, (vol. XII of the Journal of Indian Art and Industry), fig. 634.
  • Indian Jewellery: The V&A Collection London: V&A Publishing, 2008 Number: ISBN 9781851774838 p. 16, pl. 1.6
Collection
Accession number
03061(IS)

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Record createdFebruary 24, 2005
Record URL
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