Union Centrepiece
Union Centrepiece
2013 (hallmarked)
2013 (hallmarked)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
In 2013 the V&A commissioned Miriam Hanid to commemorate the work of Christiaen van Vianen, the 17th century Dutch master silversmith who worked for Charles I. Van Vianen’s Dolphin Basin, displayed in the British Galleries, provided Hanid with a starting point to create a companion piece that celebrates the sculptural qualities of Van Vianen’s work. Hanid used flat chasing, the repeated hammering of sheet metal with small blunt tools, to create the watery surface of the centrepiece. The fluid nature of this interpretation is also a reference to the transitory nature of silver, often melted down to be refashioned in a new style or converted into bullion to offset debts. Miriam Hanid is an internationally recognised silversmith, specialising in chasing, forming and engraving, and her work is in many public collections including the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths, Eton College, New College Oxford, The Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Museum of Wales.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Union Centrepiece (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Silver, embossed, cut and shaped |
Brief description | Union Centrepiece, silver, London hallmarks for 2013, designed and made by Miriam Hanid |
Physical description | Centrepiece, embossed silver, the entire surface with wave and rippled indentations in imitation of eddying currents of water. In the form of an opening, spreading spiral, starting in the centre with strips on the upper and lower edges curving away and bent back from the direction of the main body. |
Dimensions |
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Production type | Unique |
Gallery label |
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Credit line | Commissioned by the Victoria and Albert Museum |
Object history | In 2013 the V&A commissioned Miriam Hanid to commemorate the work of Christiaen van Vianen, the 17th century Dutch master silversmith who worked for Charles I. Van Vianen’s Dolphin Basin, displayed in the British Galleries, provided Hanid with a starting point to create a companion piece that celebrates the sculptural qualities of Van Vianen’s work. The commission was for the V&A exhibition, Treasures of the Royal Courts, Tudors, Stuarts and the Russian Tsars, 07/03/2013 - 14/07/2013. |
Summary | In 2013 the V&A commissioned Miriam Hanid to commemorate the work of Christiaen van Vianen, the 17th century Dutch master silversmith who worked for Charles I. Van Vianen’s Dolphin Basin, displayed in the British Galleries, provided Hanid with a starting point to create a companion piece that celebrates the sculptural qualities of Van Vianen’s work. Hanid used flat chasing, the repeated hammering of sheet metal with small blunt tools, to create the watery surface of the centrepiece. The fluid nature of this interpretation is also a reference to the transitory nature of silver, often melted down to be refashioned in a new style or converted into bullion to offset debts. Miriam Hanid is an internationally recognised silversmith, specialising in chasing, forming and engraving, and her work is in many public collections including the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths, Eton College, New College Oxford, The Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Museum of Wales. |
Bibliographic reference | Crafts Skill Awards in Crafts Magazine, July/August 2013, Issue 243, p.6. ill. ISSN: 0306-610K |
Collection | |
Accession number | M.1-2013 |
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Record created | February 18, 2013 |
Record URL |
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