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Silver Salver, Palace of Necessidades, Lisbon

Photograph
1866 (photographed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Sir Henry Cole, the first director of South Kensington Museum (now the V&A) understood the importance of photography as an extension of the resources of the Museum. He saw a role for photography in terms of documenting and promoting the Museum’s collection, as well as a tool for art education. In 1856, When Cole appointed his brother-in-law, Charles Thurston Thompson, as Museum Photographer, the first museum photographic service was born.

Under Cole’s direction, the Museum sourced photographs from a wide range of suppliers and sponsored photographic campaigns abroad. In 1866, Thurston Thompson traveled to Iberia armed with a registry of desirable items for photographing. Included among the list were objects from the collections of the Royal Palaces in Lisbon. The lack of contextuality of these photographs points to Thurston Thompson’s belief in his role as a documentary photographer.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleSilver Salver, Palace of Necessidades, Lisbon (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Albumen print from wet collodion glass negative
Brief description
Photograph by Charles Thurston Thompson, 'Silver Salver, Palace of Necessidades, Lisbon', albumen print, 1866
Physical description
A sepia-coloured mounted photograph bound with 19 other photographs in album with introductory text and table of contents. This photographs depicts a metal platter with a central medallion with an embossed eagle surrounded by a floral motif with animals.
Dimensions
  • Album cover height: 47.5cm
  • Album cover width: 41cm
  • Album cover depth: 2.5cm
  • Image height: 269mm
  • Image width: 275mm
Gallery label
(27 November 2018)
Cast Courts Reinstallation, 27 November 2018

6. PHOTOGRAPH OF
Salver

Charles Thurston Thompson, 1866

Charles Thurston Thompson was the Museum’s first official photographer. He produced many photographs of objects for the collection as part of an arrangement between the Museum and the Arundel Society, a group of collectors and art critics. In 1866, the Museum sent him to record collections in Spain and Portugal. Three years later, the Society published his photographs, including this oneornate silver salver, in Examples of Art Workmanship of Various Ages and Countries: Decorative Plate. Chiefly Portugeuse, German and Italian.

REPRODUCED FROM
Albumen print
Lisbon, Portugal
Museum no. 67448


Object history
This is one of 20 photographs bound in an album published by the Arundel Society. Founded in 1848, the aim of the socieity was to promote a greater knowledge of art through the publication of literary works and reproductions. Following from Henry Cole's determination to make the South Kensington Museum's collection of reproductions as comprehensive as possible, the Museum in 1866 entered into an arrangment with the Arundel Society to publish and sell reproductions, including fictile ivories and photographs of objects exhibited at the Museum. In addition, the arrangment included the publication and sale of a series of books entitled 'Examples of Art Workmanship of Various Ages and Countries'. These books, which appeared between 1866 and 1875, consisted of a short introduction and photographic illustrations. This photograph is from the publication dedicated to 'Decorative Plate, chiefly Portuguese, German and Italian', published in 1869.
Subject depicted
Associations
Summary
Sir Henry Cole, the first director of South Kensington Museum (now the V&A) understood the importance of photography as an extension of the resources of the Museum. He saw a role for photography in terms of documenting and promoting the Museum’s collection, as well as a tool for art education. In 1856, When Cole appointed his brother-in-law, Charles Thurston Thompson, as Museum Photographer, the first museum photographic service was born.

Under Cole’s direction, the Museum sourced photographs from a wide range of suppliers and sponsored photographic campaigns abroad. In 1866, Thurston Thompson traveled to Iberia armed with a registry of desirable items for photographing. Included among the list were objects from the collections of the Royal Palaces in Lisbon. The lack of contextuality of these photographs points to Thurston Thompson’s belief in his role as a documentary photographer.
Associated object
58:555 (Copy)
Bibliographic reference
'Examples of Art Workmanship of Various Ages and Countries: Decorative Plate. Chiefly Portugeuse, German and Italian'. London: The Arundel Socieity for Promoting the Knowldge of Art, 1869.
Collection
Accession number
67448

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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