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Cup thumbnail 2
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Not on display

Cup

1568-1569 (hallmarked)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The rock crystal bowl was probably recycled from an earlier piece. During the Reformation precious metal from many old reliquaries was melted down and rock-crystal components reused. This cup was possibly made by the royal goldsmith, Affabel Partridge. In about 1824 it was restored and given by the Duke of Wellington to his godchild Lady Clementina Villiers at her christening.

This object would once have been part of the buffet. The buffet of plate was an important feature of medieval and Renaissance banquets. Often made of oak or walnut, buffets usually stood at the side of a dining room, their shelves filled with tablewares. Gold and silver vessels were displayed to convey a sense of the owner's wealth. Normally these vessels were used for the service of food and drink, but on great state occasions they would be set out purely for display.

Sir Arthur Gilbert and his wife Rosalinde formed one of the world's great decorative art collections, including silver, mosaics, enamelled portrait miniatures and gold boxes. Arthur Gilbert donated his extraordinary collection to Britain in 1996.

Object details

Category
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Cup
  • Cover
Materials and techniques
Raised, cast, chased, engraved, embossed and stamped silver-gilt and cut rock crystal glass
Brief description
Rock crystal cup and cover with silver-gilt mounts; Affabel Partridge, London, 1568-69.
Physical description
The cup stands on a spreading foot stamped with a band of egg-and-dart ornament, foliage, and gadroons, with a domed rock-crystal boss at the centre. Three short straps in the form of female demifigures and foliage connect the border to the base of the stem. The vase-shaped stem is chased on the lower part with cartouches and fleur-de-lis and is further decorated with three applied female masks; the upper stem is fluted and embellished with three openwork brackets with applied masks. The cylindrical rock-crystal bowl rests in a bulbous mount chased with basketwork and stylized fruit, with applied female figures. The spreading lip is decorated with similar chased fruit, applied medallions in the form of female masks, and an engraved band of strapwork and foliage. The upper and lower parts of the bowl are connected by three straps formed as caryatid demifigures above fluting, with lion masks applied at their midpoint. The raised cover is embossed with a band of strapwork, masks, and fruit on a matted ground, with applied bosses chased with basketwork, and is stamped around the border with gadroons. In the centre of the cover is a rock-crystal boss set into a stamped surround with applied brackets similar to those of the foot. The later tripod scroll finial is surmounted by a fluted vase. The interior of the cover is engraved with a laurel wreath containing the bust of a warrior.
Dimensions
  • Height: 42.8cm
  • Diameter: 16.1cm
  • Weight: 1820g
Measured 25/04/24 IW
Marks and inscriptions
  • London hallmarks for 1568-69
  • Mark of Affabel Partridge (Possibly)
Gallery label
(16/11/2016)
(Gallery 71, case 1)
4. Covered beaker and stand
1760
Russian statesman and art collector Count Petr Borisovitch Sheremetev received this beaker and stand to mark his appointment as Adjutant-General in 1760, possibly from the Empress Elizabeth. Its maker, Johan Henrik Hopper, was one of many foreign craftspeople who had immigrated to Russia since the 17th century.
St Petersburg, Russia; Johan Henrik Hopper (active about 1760)
Gold
Engraved with the arms of Count Petr Borisovitch Sheremetev (1713–87)
Museum nos. Loan:Gilbert.26:1, 2; 27-2008
Credit line
The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection on loan to the Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Object history
Provenance: Given by the Duke of Wellington to Lady Clementina Augusta Wellington Villiers at her Christening, 1824. By descent to the Earl of Jersey, sale, Christie's, lot 105, June 24, 1981. Acquired by Arthur Gilbert from S.J. Phillips Ltd, London, 1984.

A Great Man's Friendship: letters of the Duke of Wellington to Mary Marchioness of Salisbury, London 1927 p.285

Wellington writes to Lady Salisbury 'Clementina's marriage is still reported..'

The footnote adds that Clementine died in 1858 and that she was the Duke's godchild. His Christening Gift was a superb piece of plate an ancient Russian cup.

Muriel Wellesley Wellington in Civil Life through the eyes of those who knew him .1939 p.51

Sarah Sophia, 5th Countess of Jersey 1785-1867, Clementina's mother, was the daughter of John Fane 10th Earl of Westmorland and a childhood friend as the Duke of Wellington was ADC to her father when he was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
P.57 in September 1824 the Duke of Wellington went to stay with the Jerseys (citing source Fraser Words on Wellington, 1902 p. 34)
Production
Maker's mark a bird in a shaped shield (Jackson, p. 98) possibly for Affabel Partridge, marked on the foot, lip and cover. The finial later than 1568 and the rock crystal bosses in the foot and cover modern restorations.
Subjects depicted
Summary
The rock crystal bowl was probably recycled from an earlier piece. During the Reformation precious metal from many old reliquaries was melted down and rock-crystal components reused. This cup was possibly made by the royal goldsmith, Affabel Partridge. In about 1824 it was restored and given by the Duke of Wellington to his godchild Lady Clementina Villiers at her christening.

This object would once have been part of the buffet. The buffet of plate was an important feature of medieval and Renaissance banquets. Often made of oak or walnut, buffets usually stood at the side of a dining room, their shelves filled with tablewares. Gold and silver vessels were displayed to convey a sense of the owner's wealth. Normally these vessels were used for the service of food and drink, but on great state occasions they would be set out purely for display.

Sir Arthur Gilbert and his wife Rosalinde formed one of the world's great decorative art collections, including silver, mosaics, enamelled portrait miniatures and gold boxes. Arthur Gilbert donated his extraordinary collection to Britain in 1996.
Bibliographic references
  • Schroder, Timothy. The Gilbert collection of gold and silver. Los Angeles (Los Angeles County Museum of Art) 1988, cat. no. 6, pp. 48-53. ISBN.0875871445
  • Jones, E. Alfred. Old silver of Europe and North America from early times to the nineteenth century. London: B.T. Batsford, 1928, pp. XXXIII, no. 3.
  • Schroder, Timothy. 'Sixteenth century English silver: some problems of attribution'. The Proceedings of the Silver Society, 1983, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 40-6.
  • Clayton, Michael. Christie's pictorial history of English and American silver. Oxford: Phaidon/Christie's, 1985, cat. no. 2, p.30. ISBN.0714880183
  • Schroder, Timothy. 'Early English silver rarities'. The Antique Collector. June 1986, vol. 57, no. 6, fig. 4, p. 119.
  • Queen Charlotte's loan exhibition of old silver : English Irish and Sottish, all prior to 1739, with examples of present day work, London : Saint Catherine Press, 1929 64
Other number
SG 176 - Arthur Gilbert Number
Collection
Accession number
LOAN:GILBERT.48:1, 2-2008

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Record createdJune 26, 2008
Record URL
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