Necklet thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Necklet

ca. 1850 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Some British women collected traditional jewellery, and north Indian jewellery became fashionable among British women living in India in the 1880s. More commonly they had copies of European designs made locally. This necklet was acquired by London's India Museum in 1855, and would probably have been collected as an example of good traditional work. The front of the necklace is set with diamonds, but the back is enamelled with flower and leaf patterns in translucent red and green on an opaque white ground. Although it could not be seen when the necklet was being worn, the enamel would have protected the gold from abrasion by contact with the wearer's skin.

The India Museum was originally the East India Company's museum, housed at East India House in Leadenhall Street, London. With the demise of the East India Company in 1858, the museum came under the India Office and the collections were moved to Whitehall.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Enamelled gold, set with diamonds and pearls, with pendent pearls and emeralds
Brief description
Necklet, North India, about 1850.
Physical description
Necklet, enamelled gold, set with diamonds and pearls, with pendent pearls and emeralds.
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 18.5cm
  • Width: 17cm
Gallery label
Some British women collected traditional jewellery, and North Indian jewellery became fashionable among the British women in India in the 1880s. More commonly they had copies of European designs made locally.(About 1990)
Object history
Acquired by the India Museum in 1855, then transferred in 1879 to the South Kensington Museum, which later became the Victoria & Albert Museum.
Production
North India
Summary
Some British women collected traditional jewellery, and north Indian jewellery became fashionable among British women living in India in the 1880s. More commonly they had copies of European designs made locally. This necklet was acquired by London's India Museum in 1855, and would probably have been collected as an example of good traditional work. The front of the necklace is set with diamonds, but the back is enamelled with flower and leaf patterns in translucent red and green on an opaque white ground. Although it could not be seen when the necklet was being worn, the enamel would have protected the gold from abrasion by contact with the wearer's skin.

The India Museum was originally the East India Company's museum, housed at East India House in Leadenhall Street, London. With the demise of the East India Company in 1858, the museum came under the India Office and the collections were moved to Whitehall.
Bibliographic reference
Susan Stronge, Nima Smith, and J.C. Harle. A Golden Treasury : Jewellery from the Indian Subcontinent London : Victoria and Albert Museum in association with Mapin Publishing, Ahmedabad, 1988. ISBN: 0944142168 pp.74-75 STRONGE, Susan, Nima Smith and James Harle, A Golden Treasury. Jewellery from the Indian subcontinent, London, 1988, catalogue number 67, p.75
Collection
Accession number
03202(IS)

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Record createdFebruary 24, 2004
Record URL
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