Ewer and Basin thumbnail 1
Ewer and Basin thumbnail 2
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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Medieval & Renaissance, Room 62, The Foyle Foundation Gallery

Ewer and Basin

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

Ewer and basin sets were originally used for hand washing during meals. The design of this ewer, however, is impractical. It would have been impossible to use as a vessel due to its weight, its small foot and its awkwardly-placed handle. Both the ewer and the basin are lavishly decorated with images of classical deities surrounded by strapwork patterns and embossed designs of fruit and foliage. Heavy, elaborately decorated objects like these were not functional but were made solely for display and would have been seen at grand dinners held by fashionable Venetians.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Ewer
  • Basin
Materials and techniques
Silver-gilt, raised, chased, embossed and cast
Brief description
Ewer and basin, silver-gilt, Italy (Venice), about 1580
Physical description
Ewer, silver-gilt, with classical urn-shaped body on small round foot, a cast mask and headdress forming the neck and spout and a cast figure forming the handle. The body decorated with chased and embossed unidentified classical scenes surrounded by strapwork patterns and designs of fruit and foliage. Basin, silver-gilt, the inner section chased and embossed with three scenes containing amorini riding sea-horses, the outer section with six scenes, three similar to the ewer interspersed with three showing a horse, stag and bull. Bolted to the recessed centre is a round medallion with two clasical female figures supporting a plain oval shield.
Dimensions
  • Ewer height: 43.9cm
  • Ewer, including handle width: 18.7cm
  • Ewer, of body diameter: 16.6cm
  • Ewer weight: 2.67kg
  • Basin diameter: 67.5cm
  • Basin depth: 7.5cm
  • Basin weight: 3.74kg
Measured for the Medieval and Renaissance Galleries
Marks and inscriptions
  • on reverse: town mark for Venice
  • on reverse: maker's mark W and SB in monogram, unidentified
Gallery label
EWER AND BASIN Silver-gilt Marked with W and SB ITALIAN (Venice); about 1580 Bequeathed by Dr. W.L. Hildburgh F.S.A. M.237&a-1956 Ewer and basin sets were originally used for hand washing during meals. The design of this ewer, however, is impractical. It would have been impossible to use as a vessel due to its weight, its small foot and its awkwardly-placed handle. Both the ewer and the basin are lavishly decorated with images of classical deities surrounded by strapwork patterns and embossed designs of fruit and foliage. Heavy, elaborately decorated objects like these were not functional but were made solely for display and would have been seen at grand dinners held by fashionable Venetians.(22/07/2004)
Credit line
Dr W.L. Hildburgh Bequest
Object history
Entered the Museum's collections as part of the bequest of the American-born collector, Walter Leo Hildburgh, in 1956.

Historical significance: An almost identical copper-gilt ewer and basin (the subjects of the decoration are different) are in the Kunstgewerbemuseum in Berlin, believed by Hayward to be by the same unknown goldsmith (see References).
Historical context
Before the second half of the 16th century when the use of personal forks at the dining table became widely established across Italy, dining could be a very messy affair. Although knives and spoons were in frequent use, forks were largely confined to the final 'banqueting' course, for eating sticky sweetmeats and fruits. As a result the ceremony of handwashing took on great significance. At the beginning and end of a meal, a ewer and basin were brought to the dining table by servants so that diners could wash their greasy hands from a basin replenished with flower-scented water poured from the ewer. Since basins were brought to each guest and appreciated at close range, they were often elaborately decorated.

By the time this ewer and basin were made most wealthy Italian households would have used forks on a regular basis for grand dining occasions, limiting the need for handwashing. This pair was therefore probably made for public show, a demonstration of magnificence, rather than for use. This is also suggested by the top-heavy design of the ewer, rendering it impractical. The large size, gilding and fashionable hammered decoration of the pieces would have advertised to guests the wealth and taste of the owner. They would probably have been placed in a prominent position on a credenza (a form of dresser, often a temporary tiered structure erected for specific occasions) alongside other silver and silver-gilt vessels in the same room where the meal was taking place.
Production
Hayward dates these to the early 17th century (see References) but subsequent opinion favours an earlier date.
Summary
Ewer and basin sets were originally used for hand washing during meals. The design of this ewer, however, is impractical. It would have been impossible to use as a vessel due to its weight, its small foot and its awkwardly-placed handle. Both the ewer and the basin are lavishly decorated with images of classical deities surrounded by strapwork patterns and embossed designs of fruit and foliage. Heavy, elaborately decorated objects like these were not functional but were made solely for display and would have been seen at grand dinners held by fashionable Venetians.
Bibliographic references
  • Pazzi, Piero. Introduzione al Collezionismo di Argenteria Civile e Metalli Veneti Antichi. Pietas Julia Pola (Pula), 1993, pp. 54-5
  • Hayward, J.F. Virtuoso Goldsmiths and the Triumph of Mannerism 1540-1620. London: Sotheby Parke Bernet Publications Ltd., 1976, pp. 163, 371, plates 354-5
  • Oman, Charles. Italian Secular Silver. London: HMSO for Victoria and Albert Museum, 1962, Introduction and plates 9-14. V&A Small Picture Book No. 57.
  • Oman, Charles. Argenti italiani al Victoria and Albert Museum. In: Antichità Viva VI.5 (1967), 43-53.
  • Patterson, Angus, Fashion and Armour in Renaissance Europe: Proud Lookes and Brave Attire, V&A Publishing, London, 2009, ISBN 9781851775811, p. 94, ill.
Collection
Accession number
M.237&A-1956

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Record createdNovember 10, 2005
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