Morysse and Damashin renewed and increased, very profitable for Goldsmythes and Embroderars thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 58
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Morysse and Damashin renewed and increased, very profitable for Goldsmythes and Embroderars

Engraving
1548 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Object Type
This print is an engraving, an image made by cutting lines into the surface of a flat piece of metal, inking the plate and then transferring the ink held in the lines onto a sheet of paper.

Subject Depicted
A modern transcription of the title of this set of prints might read 'Moresque and Damascene Patterns Suitable for Goldsmiths and Embroiderers'. Moresque was a term used in the later 16th century to describe a type of decoration for flat surfaces consisting of abstract, interlacing, formal, curling stem and leaf patterns, usually devoid of any human or animal presence. Damascening is a metalworking technique developed in the Middle East, whereby gold, silver and copper is inlaid into base metal. The word is derived from the place name, Damascus, in Syria. The type of designs used for damascene work were often moresque in style; they were frequently also applied to other types of objects.

This design is a delicate pattern of scrolling leaves describing circles, arcs and curves. Apart from the small variations to be expected from a work drawn by hand on the printing plate, this design is symmetrical along an invisible line connecting the midpoints on the two longer sides.

Cultural Associations
The English word 'Moor' stems from the Latin word Mauri, which referred to the inhabitants of the Roman province of Mauretania. This included parts of the modern states of Algeria and Morocco, although not the modern Islamic Republic of Mauritania. The word 'Moor' usually refers to a Muslim of mixed Arab and Berber origin, from North Africa or southern Spain. The Moors occupied most of the Iberian peninsula in the early 8th century, but were pushed back to Granada by the Christian kingdoms of northern Spain by the mid-13th and were finally expelled in 1492. Until the 18th century a black person was commonly referred to in Britain as a 'moor' or 'blackamoor'; most famously, Othello was 'The Moor of Venice'.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleMorysse and Damashin renewed and increased, very profitable for Goldsmythes and Embroderars (series title)
Materials and techniques
Engraving, ink on paper
Brief description
Thomas Geminus. Plate from a suite of 29 designs for Moresque ornament entitled 'Morysse and Damashin renewed and increased, very profitable for Goldsmythes and Embroderars'. London, 1548.
Physical description
Engraving
Dimensions
  • Height: 4.3cm
  • Width: 7.6cm
Dimensions checked: measured; 21/12/1998 by NH currently mounted with 19011 and 19012 in multiple 1/4 imperial mount
Gallery label
British Galleries: Moresque was an Islamic style of ornament, associated with the Moors of North Africa and Spain (from which they were expelled in 1492). It was one of several ways to explore intricate knot patterns. Early examples of Moresque appeared on book covers but it quickly spread to goldsmiths' work and textiles. Geminus was Flemish by birth but lived in London. He was surgeon to the Tudor monarchs, as well as being an engraver and instrument maker.(27/03/2003)
Object history
NB. While the term 'blackamoor' has been used in this record, it has since fallen from usage and is now considered offensive. The term is repeated in this record in its original historical context.

Part of a group of objects previously in possession of Mr. R.S. Smith [South Kensington Museum employee?].
Summary
Object Type
This print is an engraving, an image made by cutting lines into the surface of a flat piece of metal, inking the plate and then transferring the ink held in the lines onto a sheet of paper.

Subject Depicted
A modern transcription of the title of this set of prints might read 'Moresque and Damascene Patterns Suitable for Goldsmiths and Embroiderers'. Moresque was a term used in the later 16th century to describe a type of decoration for flat surfaces consisting of abstract, interlacing, formal, curling stem and leaf patterns, usually devoid of any human or animal presence. Damascening is a metalworking technique developed in the Middle East, whereby gold, silver and copper is inlaid into base metal. The word is derived from the place name, Damascus, in Syria. The type of designs used for damascene work were often moresque in style; they were frequently also applied to other types of objects.

This design is a delicate pattern of scrolling leaves describing circles, arcs and curves. Apart from the small variations to be expected from a work drawn by hand on the printing plate, this design is symmetrical along an invisible line connecting the midpoints on the two longer sides.

Cultural Associations
The English word 'Moor' stems from the Latin word Mauri, which referred to the inhabitants of the Roman province of Mauretania. This included parts of the modern states of Algeria and Morocco, although not the modern Islamic Republic of Mauritania. The word 'Moor' usually refers to a Muslim of mixed Arab and Berber origin, from North Africa or southern Spain. The Moors occupied most of the Iberian peninsula in the early 8th century, but were pushed back to Granada by the Christian kingdoms of northern Spain by the mid-13th and were finally expelled in 1492. Until the 18th century a black person was commonly referred to in Britain as a 'moor' or 'blackamoor'; most famously, Othello was 'The Moor of Venice'.
Bibliographic references
  • Hind, A. M., Engraving in England in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, 3 vols, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1952- 1964, pp. 39-58.
  • Magdalena Adamska, Maureski Thomasa Geminusa - Próba Rekonstrukcji Wzornika [Moresque Ornaments by Thomas Geminus - an Attempt to Reconstruct His Pattern Book]', Amicissima. Studia Magdalenae Piwocka oblata (Kraków, 2010), pp. 127-137;624-630.
  • Hind, A. M., Engraving in England in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, 3 vols, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1952- 1964, pp. 39-58.
  • Victoria and Albert Museum, Department of Engraving, Illustration and Design & Department of Paintings, Accessions 1919, London: Printed Under the Authority of His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1921
Collection
Accession number
19013

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Record createdMarch 27, 2003
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