Thermometer thumbnail 1
Thermometer thumbnail 2
Not currently on display at the V&A

Thermometer

ca. 1750-60 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

During the 18th century scientific enquiry into the natural world was seen as an essential part of the education of a gentleman. Thermometers and barometers offered elegant evidence of the owner's intellectual interests. This thermometer is paired with a matching barometer (Museum no. 1097-1882) and both are finely veneered in tulipwood and kingwood to take their place beside the finest furniture of a study or of the small personal rooms known as cabinets in France.

The pair of instruments was acquired by John Jones, a British military tailor, in the 19th century. He was one of the best-known collectors of French 18th-century decorative arts and in 1882 he bequeathed his collection to the South Kensington Museum, the forerunner of the V&A.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Veneered in tulipwood, kingwood, holly and purpleheart, on a carcase of unidentified wood. The tube of thermometer in glass, flanked by white enamel plaques marked in black enamel.
Brief description
A thermometer mounted on a tall, narrow panel veneered in tulipwood and kingwood, the edges mounted with gilt-bronze, the face set with white enamel plaques inscribed in black, the inscriptions including the maker's name.
Physical description
The thermometer is mounted on a tall, narrow back panel, veneered in tulipwood and kingwood, with fillets of holly and purpleheart under the glass tube. The edges of the panel are framed with gilt-bronze mouldings. The top is a shallow arch and the gilt-bronze mounts show small foliage mounts at the corners and in the centre of the top and the bottom. In the middle of the panel, the tube is flanked with white enamel plaques, painted in black with the scales and the different types of weather, and with the maker's name.
Dimensions
  • Height: 95cm
  • Width: 17cm
Dimensions taken from Carolyn Sargentson's cataloguing notes
Marks and inscriptions
CHAUD/POULE CHAUD/1752[last digit upside-down] 25/25 20/20 15/15 TEM/PE[grave accent]RE 5/5 GLA 5/5 FROID/1740 FROID/1712 FROID/1709 LANGE DE/BOURBON (These inscriptions run across the two vertical white enamel plaques on either side of the glass tube and are all in black enamel. The split is indicated by the forward slash.)
Gallery label
  • BAROMETER AND THERMOMETER FRENCH (Paris); 1755-70 Both inscribed 'Lange de Bourbon' Veneered with kingwood and tulipwood; gilt-bronze mounts; enamel plaques Little is known of Lange de Bourbon, whose name is found on several barometers of this period, and who is recorded as 'Faiseur De Barometre du Roy' (Maker of Barometers to the King) around 1770. He may have been the François-Denis Lange. apprentice barometer-maker recorded in Paris, 1759. Unlike their English counterparts, Parisian scientific-instrument-makers usually ran very small establishments. Specialist enamellers and metal-workers would have provided the plaques and gilt-bronze mounts for these instruments. The style of veneered cases reflects upper-class Parisian taste for decorative marquetry furniture around 1750. Jones Bequest 1096-1882 (barometer), 1097-1882 (thermometer)(ca. 1994)
  • [Label text by Peter Thornton] Barometer and Thermometer French (Paris); mid-18th century Both inscribed "Lange de Bourbon" Veneered with kingwood and other woods. Gilt bronze mounts. Enamel plaques Jones Collection Museum No. 1096 and 1097-1882(ca. 1980)
Credit line
Bequeathed by John Jones
Object history
Acquired by John Jones before 1882
Summary
During the 18th century scientific enquiry into the natural world was seen as an essential part of the education of a gentleman. Thermometers and barometers offered elegant evidence of the owner's intellectual interests. This thermometer is paired with a matching barometer (Museum no. 1097-1882) and both are finely veneered in tulipwood and kingwood to take their place beside the finest furniture of a study or of the small personal rooms known as cabinets in France.

The pair of instruments was acquired by John Jones, a British military tailor, in the 19th century. He was one of the best-known collectors of French 18th-century decorative arts and in 1882 he bequeathed his collection to the South Kensington Museum, the forerunner of the V&A.
Collection
Accession number
1096-1882

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Record createdJuly 11, 2005
Record URL
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