Chandelier Rod
ca. 1650-1700 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Chandelier rod, wrought iron with twisted square rods, corkscrew tendrils running up the inside of long scrolled, flat leaves and large roses made from overlapping circular plates with scalloped edges. Traces of vermilion, gold leaf, green, gray brown, brown oil size, blue brown, yellow, stone, gray, vermilion red, blue, dark blue, cream, red ochre(?), smalt, smalt in oil, brown stone and rust.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Wrought iron |
Brief description | Chandelier rod, wrought iron, twisted square rods with corkscrew tendrils, scrolled leaves and roses, Queenhythe, London, ca. 1650-1700 |
Physical description | Chandelier rod, wrought iron with twisted square rods, corkscrew tendrils running up the inside of long scrolled, flat leaves and large roses made from overlapping circular plates with scalloped edges. Traces of vermilion, gold leaf, green, gray brown, brown oil size, blue brown, yellow, stone, gray, vermilion red, blue, dark blue, cream, red ochre(?), smalt, smalt in oil, brown stone and rust. |
Dimensions |
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Gallery label | CHANDELIER ROD
Wrought iron
England; c. 1650-1700
One of three chandelier rods from St Michael's Church, Queenhythe, London (demolished 1876), all of which can be seen nearby. All three incorporate the same features: twisted square rods, corkscrew tendrils running up the inside of long scrolled leaves and large roses made from overlapping circular plates with scalloped edges. The flat leaves and flowers are particularly characteristic of the 17th century and were painted to make them appear more realistic.
Museum No. 170-1865(07/1994) |
Object history | One of three chandelier rods from St Michael's Church, Queenhythe, London (demolished 1876). The flat leaves and flowers are particularly characteristic of the 17th century and were painted to make them appear more realistic. |
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Collection | |
Accession number | 170-1865 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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