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Not currently on display at the V&A

Vase

1824-1825 (hallmarked)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This huge silver vase has an unusually full life story. We know who designed it, who made it and who sold it. We also know for whom it was made and how much it cost. There are no periods in its 193-year life where we do not know who owned it.
The vase is based on a marble vase in the British Museum that stands almost 3 metres tall. The original vase was assembled in the 1770s by the Italian archaeologist and restorer, Giovanni Battista Piranesi. He used ancient fragments excavated at Hadrian’s Villa at Tivoli as well as modern parts made in his workshop. Piranesi’s meticulous engravings of the vase inspired the silver version.
The London silversmiths, Rebecca Emes and Edward Barnard, made the silver vase in 1824. The company’s business archive belongs to the V&A and contains documentary records of the vase’s manufacture and metal patterns used in the process.
Inscriptions on the vase record it was commissioned from Fisher, Braithwaite and Jones of London and presented to Major General Sir Edward Barnes in 1824. When he died in 1838 he left it to the Army and Navy Club, an organisation he co-founded, from where it was sold in 1983. It is now one of the most spectacular pieces in the Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection on loan to the V&A.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 22 parts.

  • Vase
  • Candlestick
  • Candlestick
  • Candlestick
  • Drip Pan
  • Drip Pan
  • Drip Pan
  • Drip Pan
  • Drip Pan
  • Drip Pan
  • Outer Sconce
  • Outer Sconce
  • Outer Sconce
  • Outer Sconce
  • Outer Sconce
  • Outer Sconce
  • Inner Sconce
  • Inner Sconce
  • Inner Sconce
  • Inner Sconce
  • Inner Sconce
  • Inner Sconce
Materials and techniques
Raised and cast silver.
Brief description
Silver, London hallmarks for 1824-25, mark of Edward Barnard and Rebecca Emes.
Physical description
The massive vase stands on a high, triangular plinth with canted angles; on the incurved sides of the plinth are three applied bull's heads with flower-and-ribbon swags between. Around the upper moulding of the plinth is an engraved inscription. Above is a base of similar section to the plinth, with gadroon and egg-and-dart mouldings. The vase itself is of krater form supported by three paw feet with torsos of Silenus above; the lower part of the body is fluted, and three busts of young fauns are applied over the fluting. The main part of the body is modelled with a classical frieze in high relief between bands of palmettes and applied scrolling vines; the spreading lip has an egg-and-dart border and applied beading. Three sets of double scroll branches, for a total of six lights, are formed as vines springing from above the torsos; they have simulated basketwork sockets and wax pans.
Dimensions
  • Height: 86.5cm
  • Without branches height: 78.3cm
Second height is vase and plinth without branches.
Marks and inscriptions
  • London hallmarks for 1824-25
  • Mark of Rebecca Emes
  • IN TESTIMONY OF FRIENDSIHP [sic] / AND HIGH REGARD FOR HIS PUBLIC AND PRIVATE / CHARACTER THIS VASE IS / PRESENTED BY THE GENTLEMEN OF THE CIVIL AND / MILITARY SERVICES OF CEYLON / TO M. GENERAL SIR EDWARD BARNES K C B (applied to the plinth)
Gallery label
Credit line
The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection on loan to the Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Object history
Provenance: Major General Sir Edward Barnes. Army and Navy Club, St. James's, London. Hancocks and Company Ltd., London, 1983.
Summary
This huge silver vase has an unusually full life story. We know who designed it, who made it and who sold it. We also know for whom it was made and how much it cost. There are no periods in its 193-year life where we do not know who owned it.
The vase is based on a marble vase in the British Museum that stands almost 3 metres tall. The original vase was assembled in the 1770s by the Italian archaeologist and restorer, Giovanni Battista Piranesi. He used ancient fragments excavated at Hadrian’s Villa at Tivoli as well as modern parts made in his workshop. Piranesi’s meticulous engravings of the vase inspired the silver version.
The London silversmiths, Rebecca Emes and Edward Barnard, made the silver vase in 1824. The company’s business archive belongs to the V&A and contains documentary records of the vase’s manufacture and metal patterns used in the process.
Inscriptions on the vase record it was commissioned from Fisher, Braithwaite and Jones of London and presented to Major General Sir Edward Barnes in 1824. When he died in 1838 he left it to the Army and Navy Club, an organisation he co-founded, from where it was sold in 1983. It is now one of the most spectacular pieces in the Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection on loan to the V&A.
Bibliographic references
  • Schroder, Timothy. The Gilbert collection of gold and silver. Los Angeles (Los Angeles County Museum of Art) 1988, cat. no. 121, pp. 446-51. ISBN.0875871445
  • Williams, Elizabeth A. The Gilbert Collection at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Los Angeles (Los Angeles County Museum of Art), 2010, fig. 15, p. 40. ISBN 9780875872100
Other numbers
  • SG 151 - Arthur Gilbert Number
  • L.2010.9.36a-v - LACMA Loan Number 2010
Collection
Accession number
LOAN:GILBERT.863:1-2008

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Record createdJune 26, 2008
Record URL
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