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Jewellery Design

Design
ca. 1860 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This design comes from 'The Brogden Album', the album contained 1,593 designs for jewellery and goldsmith's work, mainly in colour and dating between 1848 and 1884. It is a unique record of the years in which John Brogden, an internationally celebrated 'art goldsmith and jeweller worked first in partnership and then as owner-director of his own firm. This was a period of great diversity in fashionable jewellery, and the Brogden firm where noted for their skill in designing and creating a range of styles.

The firm was founded by John Brogden the elder in about 1796. From about 1824 to 1831 it was styled 'Brogden and Garland' and thereafter until 1841 'Garland and Watherston'. The younger Brogden, the son of Thomas Brogden and presumably a relative of the founder, served an apprenticeship to J.W. garland as a goldsmith and jeweller from 1834 to 1841. Following Garland's departure, the remaining partner, J.H. Watherston, removed the firm to new premises at 16 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden and in 1848 joined forces with the younger Brogden.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleJewellery Design (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Pencil, ink and watercolour drawing on paper.
Brief description
Design for jewellery, by the firm of John Brogden, about 1860
Physical description
Brown paper backed onto card, with a pencil, ink and watercolour design for a Pre-Colombian-inspired a piece of jewellery, possibly a brooch. The design is comprised of a rectangular centre frame, which has been left blank, surrounded by ornamentation, and mounted on top of which is a gold head. The frame is flanked by two curved gold shapes with black and red enamel patterns, from which hang two tear-drop pendants bearing the same motif. Suspended from the bottom is a further larger pendant of the same motif.
Dimensions
  • Height: 12cm
  • Width: 9.9cm
Styles
Production typeDesign
Subjects depicted
Summary
This design comes from 'The Brogden Album', the album contained 1,593 designs for jewellery and goldsmith's work, mainly in colour and dating between 1848 and 1884. It is a unique record of the years in which John Brogden, an internationally celebrated 'art goldsmith and jeweller worked first in partnership and then as owner-director of his own firm. This was a period of great diversity in fashionable jewellery, and the Brogden firm where noted for their skill in designing and creating a range of styles.

The firm was founded by John Brogden the elder in about 1796. From about 1824 to 1831 it was styled 'Brogden and Garland' and thereafter until 1841 'Garland and Watherston'. The younger Brogden, the son of Thomas Brogden and presumably a relative of the founder, served an apprenticeship to J.W. garland as a goldsmith and jeweller from 1834 to 1841. Following Garland's departure, the remaining partner, J.H. Watherston, removed the firm to new premises at 16 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden and in 1848 joined forces with the younger Brogden.
Bibliographic reference
Huits, Lieske. "At Once 'Ancient' and 'Modern': The Art-Journal's Illustrated Catalogues and the Notion of Adaptation in Nineteenth-Century Historicism", Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 21, no. 3 (Autumn 2022), https://doi.org/10.29411/ncaw.2022.21.3.2.
Collection
Accession number
E.2:1176-1986

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Record createdFebruary 1, 2011
Record URL
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