Tankard thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Medieval & Renaissance, Room 62, The Foyle Foundation Gallery

Tankard

ca. 1580 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The contents of late medieval and 16th century cabinets of curiosities and buffet displays reflected the prevailing European taste for natural and man-made wonders enhanced with silver or silver-gilt mounts. These were primarily objects of delight rather than of use, although often made in functional forms. Little is known about the production and marketing of mounted vessels made from exotic natural materials, although it can be assumed that certain goldsmiths specialised in the field.

Coconuts are the fruit of the cocoa palm tree which is native to the Pacific. Mounted coconut vessels were popular items on the European buffet from at least the 13th century, evoking exotic and unknown worlds overseas, and were originally credited with magical and pharmaceutical properties, such as the power to detect the presence of poisons or to act as an aphrodisiac. Although mounted coconuts were often found in collecting cabinets, most often as standing cups and sometimes with zoomorphic mounts resembling, among other creatures, owls, ostriches or eagles, they do not seem to have been considered as rare as other exotic materials, like mother-of-pearl, nautilus shell, ivory or horn. By the late 16th century skilfully carved nuts (often with Old Testament scenes or mythological stories that appealed to Mannerist sensibilities), were highly valued, but the mounts on this unworked coconut must have been valued in their own right and demonstrate the goldsmith's skill in engraving, chasing and casting.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Coconut with silver-gilt mounts
Brief description
Tankard, coconut with silver-gilt mounts, German, about 1580
Physical description
An undecorated coconut mounted in two parts with a handle to form the body and hinged lid of a tankard. The silver-gilt mounts around the neck are variously chased with fruit and strapwork cartouches or engraved with strapwork and are linked to the similarly engraved round foot by three vertical straps each chased with a putto below a female mask. The cast handle is in the shape of a herm and terminates in a hoof. The thumbpiece is cast in the shape of a two-tailed mermaid. The lid is surmounted by a turned finial.
Dimensions
  • Height: 20.5cm
  • Width: 15.2cm
  • Depth: 10.5cm
  • Weight: 0.72kg
Measured for the Medieval and Renaissance Galleries
Marks and inscriptions
  • maker's mark DS in monogram, unidentified (On foot rim)
  • On foot rim: Viennese control mark for 1866-1922 and Austro-Hungarian import mark 1901-21
Object history
Fritz states that this was formerly in a collection belonging to a member of the Rothschild family, but does not specify which (see References).

Formerly in the collection of Albert Ullmann in Frankfurt am Main.

Purchased by the Museum for £135 under the Hildburgh Bequest.

Historical significance: Coconut tankards (i..e drinking vessels with a handle) are much rarer survivors than coconut cups.
Historical context
The contents of late medieval and 16th century cabinets of curiosities and buffet displays reflected the prevailing European taste for natural and man-made wonders enhanced with silver or silver-gilt mounts. These were primarily objects of delight rather than of use, although often made in functional forms. Little is known about the production and marketing of mounted vessels made from exotic natural materials, although it can be assumed that certain goldsmiths specialised in the field.

Coconuts are the fruit of the cocoa palm tree which is native to the Pacific. Mounted coconut vessels were popular items on the European buffet from at least the 13th century, evoking exotic and unknown worlds overseas, and were originally credited with magical and pharmaceutical properties, such as the power to detect the presence of poisons or to act as an aphrodisiac. Although mounted coconuts were often found in collecting cabinets, most often as standing cups and sometimes with zoomorphic mounts resembling, among other creatures, owls, ostriches or eagles, they do not seem to have been considered as rare as other exotic materials, like mother-of-pearl, nautilus shell, ivory or horn. By the late 16th century skillfully carved nuts (often with Old Testament scenes or mythological stories that appealed to Mannerist sensibilities), were highly valued, but the mounts on this unworked coconut must have been valued in their own right and demonstrate the goldsmith's skill in engraving, chasing and casting.
Subjects depicted
Summary
The contents of late medieval and 16th century cabinets of curiosities and buffet displays reflected the prevailing European taste for natural and man-made wonders enhanced with silver or silver-gilt mounts. These were primarily objects of delight rather than of use, although often made in functional forms. Little is known about the production and marketing of mounted vessels made from exotic natural materials, although it can be assumed that certain goldsmiths specialised in the field.

Coconuts are the fruit of the cocoa palm tree which is native to the Pacific. Mounted coconut vessels were popular items on the European buffet from at least the 13th century, evoking exotic and unknown worlds overseas, and were originally credited with magical and pharmaceutical properties, such as the power to detect the presence of poisons or to act as an aphrodisiac. Although mounted coconuts were often found in collecting cabinets, most often as standing cups and sometimes with zoomorphic mounts resembling, among other creatures, owls, ostriches or eagles, they do not seem to have been considered as rare as other exotic materials, like mother-of-pearl, nautilus shell, ivory or horn. By the late 16th century skilfully carved nuts (often with Old Testament scenes or mythological stories that appealed to Mannerist sensibilities), were highly valued, but the mounts on this unworked coconut must have been valued in their own right and demonstrate the goldsmith's skill in engraving, chasing and casting.
Bibliographic reference
Fritz, Rolf. Die Gefäße aus Kokosnuß in Mitteleuropa: 1250-1800. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 1983, pp. 48, 110, cat. no. 132, plate 73.
Collection
Accession number
M.36-1960

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Record createdOctober 31, 2005
Record URL
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