Not currently on display at the V&A

Candlestick

1921 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Nelson Dawson (1859-1942) was a distinguished painter, silversmith and jeweller of the English Arts & Crafts movement. He trained as an architect and then studied painting at the South Kensington Schools. In 1881 he took up metalworking. He studied enamelling under Alexander Fisher and, after his marriage in 1893, set up a workshop with his wife Edith Robinson whom he taught enamelling and who subsequently carried out the enamelled decoration which is a characteristic feature of much of his work. In 1901 he set up the Artificers’ Guild in his Chiswick workshop, but it passed into the possession of Montague Fordham in 1903. Nelson Dawson gave up metalworking in 1914 and devoted the rest of his life to painting.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Cast bronze with champlevé enamel
Brief description
Cast bronze with champlevé enamel, London, 1921, designed and made by Nelson Dawson.
Physical description
Candlestick with large disc-shaped drip tray attached halfway down the stem, a socket shaped holder for the candle, and an octagonal foot. Bronze with champlevé enamel decoration.
Dimensions
  • Height: 12.5cm
  • Of drip tray diameter: 12cm
  • Of foot width: 8.3cm
Checked by Megan Thomas on 15/11/2006
Style
Object history
Purchased from Nelson Dawson.

Nelson Dawson Exhibition RF.2006/662
Summary
Nelson Dawson (1859-1942) was a distinguished painter, silversmith and jeweller of the English Arts & Crafts movement. He trained as an architect and then studied painting at the South Kensington Schools. In 1881 he took up metalworking. He studied enamelling under Alexander Fisher and, after his marriage in 1893, set up a workshop with his wife Edith Robinson whom he taught enamelling and who subsequently carried out the enamelled decoration which is a characteristic feature of much of his work. In 1901 he set up the Artificers’ Guild in his Chiswick workshop, but it passed into the possession of Montague Fordham in 1903. Nelson Dawson gave up metalworking in 1914 and devoted the rest of his life to painting.
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.232-1921

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Record createdNovember 15, 2006
Record URL
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