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Not currently on display at the V&A

Mirror

5th century BC (made), 19th century (decorated)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Mirror, bronze, engraved with a scene of a satyr or sileni and a maenad.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Bronze, engraved
Brief description
Bronze mirror engraved with a scene of a sileni and a maenad, Northern Italy (Umbria or Tuscany), Etruscan, 5th century BC
Physical description
Mirror, bronze, engraved with a scene of a satyr or sileni and a maenad.
Dimensions
  • Height: 21cm
  • Width: 15.6cm
Style
Credit line
Salting Bequest
Object history
George Salting was born in Australia on 15 August 1835, the elder son of Severin Kanute Salting (1805-1865), a wealthy businessman and landowner, and Louisa Augusta, née Fiellerup. Following an education at Eton College, 1848-53, and the University of Sydney, from where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1857, Salting settled in London. In 1858-59 he toured the continent, visiting galleries, churches and architectural monuments. After the death of his father on 14 September 1865, he inherited a fortune estimated at £30,000 per annum and devoted himself thereafter to the study and collecting of works of art including lacquer and Oriental porcelain. Such was the extent of the accumulations that filled his rooms above the Thatched House Club at 86 St James's Street, London, that in 1874 Salting started to deposit items on loan in the South Kensington Museum. The Frederic Spitzer sale of Medieval and Renaissance objects d’art in 1893 resulted in a diversification of Salting’s collecting interests: Italian majolica, bronzes and reliefs, Persian, Damascas and Turkish ware, Limoges enamels, illuminated manuscripts, carved woodwork and tapestries, and Japanese lacquer and European steel and iron.

He died on 12 December 1909 and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London. Salting bequeathed works to the National Gallery, British Museum and Victoria & Albert Museum. The Trustees of the National Gallery received those works which were already on loan and were also allowed to select those from Salting's Collection which they would like to receive. In total this amounted to 192 works. The pictures were hung in the Gallery in 1911. There were no special conditions attached to the bequest. Salting bequeathed his prints and drawings to the British Museum and a substantial number of objects to the Victoria and Albert Museum. The bequest to the V&A was conditional that the objects would not be distributed over various sections but all kept together. Including three works presented during his lifetime, there are currently 164 works in the National Gallery Collection which have been donated by Salting. In addition, thirty-one of the works bequeathed by Salting are now held by the Tate Gallery.
Production
Said to have been found in a tomb at Palestrina. Decorated with granulation which may be a 19th century addition.
Subjects depicted
Collection
Accession number
M.707-1910

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Record createdMay 3, 2005
Record URL
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