Not currently on display at the V&A

Aquamanile


Electrotype. From the C19th register: "EWER (AQUAMANILE). The original, of copper, incised with ornament, is in the Hungarian National Museum. In the form of a centaur with the body of a horse and the head of a man with arms holding a pierced tambourine; a man playing a flute stands on the back of the horse. German. 12th centy. H. 1 ft. 5 in., W 1 ft. 2 1/2 in. Bought of the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Budapest, 9l. 10s."


Object details

Object type
Materials and techniques
Brief description
Electrotype. From the C19th register: "EWER (AQUAMANILE). The original, of copper, incised with ornament, is in the Hungarian National Museum. In the form of a centaur with the body of a horse and the head of a man with arms holding a pierced tambourine; a man playing a flute stands on the back of the horse. German. 12th centy. H. 1 ft. 5 in., W 1 ft. 2 1/2 in. Bought of the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Budapest, 9l. 10s."
Object history
This electrotype impression of an aquamanile was bought by the Museum in 1887. The original aquamanile from which it was copied is in the Hungarian National Museum.

Electrotype copies were used as design aids for artists, artisans and students in the government schools of design which were run under the aegis of the Department of Science and Art.

As an electrotype the aquamanile is an example of a 19th-century design model. Electrotypes play a key role in helping us to understand the V&A in its earliest days. The Museum grew largely out of the Great Exhibition in 1851 and, under the guidance of Henry Cole, sought to arrest the perceived decline in British design. The Museum aimed, initially, to collect 'modern manufactures' for the education of manufacturers, designers and the public, with a long-term goal of improving the quality and quantity of Britain's manufactured goods. Cole was also in charge of the Government Schools of Design, which he set about reforming. Cole passionately believed in the potential of both museums and the schools of design, to raise standards of taste.

The appointment of John Charles Robinson as curator of the Museum in 1853 heralded a slight change in focus. Under Robinson and Cole historic works of art were seen as just as instructive as contemporary work. For Cole and Robinson, if historic works of art could not be acquired, copies were a perfectly viable alternative.

The aim of the Museum was to present a lesson in world ornament. The Museum bought electrotypes as part of its growing collection of reproductions. This collection enabled students to look closely at both modern and historic objects that were otherwise inaccessible. Electrotypes provided the same function as the Museum's collection of plaster casts. They sit alongside photography, invented around the same time, as the products of revolutionary new technology that enabled the reproduction of works of art to be made available to a wide audience. The relationship with photography is close. The electrotypes were not generally working copies. They were impressions of the outside surfaces of an object, in effect, 3-dimensional photographs.
Collection
Accession number
REPRO.1887-27

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
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