Please complete the form to email this item.

Locket

Locket

  • Place of origin:

    England, Great Britain (made)

  • Date:

    1775-1800 (made)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Unknown (production)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Engraved gold, hair, ivory

  • Museum number:

    941-1888

  • Gallery location:

    Jewellery, room 91 mezzanine, case 81, shelf D3, box 7

  • Download image

Memorial jewellery to honour the dead is one of the largest categories of 18th- century jewellery to survive. Many mourning jewels have inscriptions that record the name and dates of the dead person.

From 1760 there was a new vogue for memorial medallions or lockets. These became especially popular in Britain, though similar work was produced throughout Europe.

The lockets could be bought ready made, and the designs were standardised. Neo-classical motifs of funerary urns, plinths and obelisks joined the more traditional cherubs, angels and weeping willows. Hair was preserved as curls within the locket, or cut up and used to create designs.

Physical description

Engraved gold frame enclosing a miniature of an urn painted on ivory with hair and with the initials WWL surmounted by the inscription A Pledge of Eternal Affection.

Place of Origin

England, Great Britain (made)

Date

1775-1800 (made)

Artist/maker

Unknown (production)

Materials and Techniques

Engraved gold, hair, ivory

Marks and inscriptions

'WWL'
'A Pledge of Eternal Affection'

Dimensions

Height: 4.8 cm, Width: 2.8 cm, Depth: 0.6 cm

Descriptive line

Engraved gold frame enclosing a miniature of an urn with the initials WWL surmounted by the inscription A Pledge of Eternal Affection, England, 1775-1800

Materials

Gold; Ivory; Hair

Techniques

Engraving

Subjects depicted

Love; Mourning; Urns; Miniatures (paintings)

Categories

Metalwork; Jewellery; Death

Collection code

MET

Download image
Qr_O126191
Ajax-loader