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On display
Image of Gallery in South Kensington

Hinge Plate

1680-1710 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The intricate lock has four turning bolts that can be set to various combinations. For added security, a sliding panel reveals two dials to record every turn of the lock.

This type of lock is a rim lock, with its mechanism entirely enclosed in a case to be mounted on a door. Unlike later mortise locks that were built into doors and might match the overall decorative scheme of a room, rim locks could be removed when the owner moved house, to be fixed to a door in the new house.

Locks and keys were symbols of ownership and authority. Lockplates and key escutcheons, made of highly reflective materials, provided the finishing touches to decorative schemes.

English locksmiths were based mainly in London and the Midlands and were renowned for their ingenuity. Wolverhampton produced, according to one writer in 1686, locks ‘curiously polisht and the keys so finely wrought, that ‘tis reasonable to think they were never exceeded’. The diarist John Evelyn recorded in 1654 that a lock with ‘rare contrivances’ could be viewed as a masterpiece, ‘esteem’d a curiositie even among foraine princes’.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Steel, brass, forged and chiselled, blued
Brief description
Hinge plate of pierced brass on a blued steel base, decorated with vines, tulips and sunflowers, England, Birmingham, ca. 1680, possibly by John Wilkes (pair with 5405-1859)
Physical description
Rectangular hinge plates (this and 5403-1859) of pierced and engraved brass on a blued steel base, the brass in the form of twirling tendrils with leaves, tulips and sunflowers. The narrower hinged sections are engraved with leaves and vines (possibly later). The hinges are are fixed with a turned steel baluster rod.
Dimensions
  • Height: 27.0cm
  • Width: 13.0cm
  • Pierced brass plate width: 9.1cm
  • Depth: 1.7cm
Style
Gallery label
(07/1994)
PAIR OF DOOR HINGE PLATES, Wrought iron, blued, engraved and pierced and brass, gilded, England; c. 1670-1700

Possibly by John Wilkes of Birmingham (d. 1733). Other locks by Wilkes can be seen in this case. The narrow plate is of a later date.

Museum No. 5404-1859
Object history
This lock has open scrollwork in brass contrasting with a ‘blued’ steel base. The lock has four turning bolts. For added security, a sliding panel reveals two dials to record every turn of the lock.

This type of lock is a rim lock, with its mechanism entirely enclosed in a case to be mounted on a door. Unlike later mortise locks that were built into doors and might match the overall decorative scheme of a room, rim locks could be removed when the owner moved house, to be fixed to a door in the new house. The bold proportions and twirling ornament are unmistakeably Baroque and would complement contemporary decoration in the house without matching exactly. On this example, even the inner steel workings are finely engraved.

The Museum acquired the lock for £15.15 from the Londesborough Sale in 1888.
Production
Based on similar signed locks of the period
Summary
The intricate lock has four turning bolts that can be set to various combinations. For added security, a sliding panel reveals two dials to record every turn of the lock.

This type of lock is a rim lock, with its mechanism entirely enclosed in a case to be mounted on a door. Unlike later mortise locks that were built into doors and might match the overall decorative scheme of a room, rim locks could be removed when the owner moved house, to be fixed to a door in the new house.

Locks and keys were symbols of ownership and authority. Lockplates and key escutcheons, made of highly reflective materials, provided the finishing touches to decorative schemes.

English locksmiths were based mainly in London and the Midlands and were renowned for their ingenuity. Wolverhampton produced, according to one writer in 1686, locks ‘curiously polisht and the keys so finely wrought, that ‘tis reasonable to think they were never exceeded’. The diarist John Evelyn recorded in 1654 that a lock with ‘rare contrivances’ could be viewed as a masterpiece, ‘esteem’d a curiositie even among foraine princes’.
Associated objects
Bibliographic references
  • Rupert Gentle and Rachael Feild, Domestic Metalwork 1640-1820, Antique Collectors Club, 1998, p. 386
  • Griggs, W. Iron work : 53 plates, from objects and drawings in the South Kensington Museum, reproduced by W. Griggs. London : W. Griggs & Sons Ltd., 1898. Pl.14
Collection
Accession number
5404-1859

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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