Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 58, Bromley-by-Bow Room

Cup and Cover

1888 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Object Type
This electrotype cup and cover is a copy of a 16th-century silver-gilt original. Cups had the highest status of any item made of precious metal in the 16th and early 17th centuries. They were frequently exchanged as gifts between monarchs and their subjects as well as between countries, or given to commemorate marriages and christenings and to mark important political appointments. Cups were also used as practical drinking vessels, passed around the dining table for their contents to be shared by more than one guest. They were designed in a huge variety of forms and usually gilded, therefore becoming valued as display plate and joining ewers, basins and other impressive silver vessels on a sideboard or 'buffet'.

Materials & Making
The technique of reproducing objects by electrotyping was first developed by the manufacturing firm of Elkington & Co. of Birmingham in the 1840s. A plaster mould is made from the original object and used to cast a model in base metal. The model and an amount of plating metal are connected to electric terminals and placed in a container filled with a conductive solution. The electrical current causes particles of the plating metal to be deposited on the surface of the model. The thickness of the plating can be regulated by the duration and voltage of the current. The plated object is then worked manually to erase imperfections.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Cups
  • Lid
Materials and techniques
Electrotype copy of silver-gilt original
Brief description
Cup and cover
Dimensions
  • With lid height: 41cm
  • Diameter: 15.5cm
Dimensions checked: Measured; 06/09/2001 by KB
Gallery label
British Galleries: ELECTROPLATE COPIES OF TUDOR SILVER
The custom of melting down silver to remake it in newly-fashionable forms means that few pieces have survived from the 16th or early 17th centuries. These pieces are copies, made between 1868 and 1888 of the kinds of silver that might have been displayed on a court cupboard in about 1620.(27/03/2003)
Object history
Original cup and cover given to the Queen Elizabeth's Hospital, Bristol (granted charter in 1590), by William Byrde in 1597; made in London by an unidentified maker 'IM', in the late 16th century
Made by Elkington & Co., Birmingham
Production
Original cup and cover given to the Queen Elizabeth's Hospital, Bristol (granted charter in 1590), by William Byrde in 1597; made in London by an unidentified maker 'IM', in the late 16th century; Made by Elkington & Co., Birmingham
Summary
Object Type
This electrotype cup and cover is a copy of a 16th-century silver-gilt original. Cups had the highest status of any item made of precious metal in the 16th and early 17th centuries. They were frequently exchanged as gifts between monarchs and their subjects as well as between countries, or given to commemorate marriages and christenings and to mark important political appointments. Cups were also used as practical drinking vessels, passed around the dining table for their contents to be shared by more than one guest. They were designed in a huge variety of forms and usually gilded, therefore becoming valued as display plate and joining ewers, basins and other impressive silver vessels on a sideboard or 'buffet'.

Materials & Making
The technique of reproducing objects by electrotyping was first developed by the manufacturing firm of Elkington & Co. of Birmingham in the 1840s. A plaster mould is made from the original object and used to cast a model in base metal. The model and an amount of plating metal are connected to electric terminals and placed in a container filled with a conductive solution. The electrical current causes particles of the plating metal to be deposited on the surface of the model. The thickness of the plating can be regulated by the duration and voltage of the current. The plated object is then worked manually to erase imperfections.
Collection
Accession number
REPRO.1888B/1, 2-635

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Record createdMarch 27, 2003
Record URL
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