Column
1850-1882 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
These columns were initially attributed to the workshop of the Birmingham industrialist Matthew Boulton, perhaps because subsequent to entering the Museum the stone for the columns was identified as 'fluorspar'. In the later part of the 18th century a rare form of purple and yellow banded fluorite known as blue john, found only in the Treak Cliff Cavern, near Castleton in Derbyshire, became a fashionable material for interior decoration and decorative household objects. Matthew Boulton had attempted (unsuccessfully) to profit from this popularity in 1769 and in the early 1770s by purchasing quantities of stone from the mine, much of which he carved in the form of vases and to which he added gilded metal mounts. However, aside from the fact that the stone of the columns was recently confirmed to be amethyst, the pair of columns formerly in the Jones collection do not correspond to the type of object produced by Bolton and the inspiration for the female figure balanced on a sphere and holding a laurel wreath appears to derive from French models. A gilded bronze candelabrum of 1810 from the workshop of the French bronze founder Pierre-Philippe Thomire (who at that date operated in partnership as Thomire, Duterme & Cie) is in the form of a similar, though much larger, female figure who holds aloft two wreaths, each set with four nozzles for candles, and who balances on a sphere mounted on a short column of polished red marble. It seems likely that the columns from the Jones collection are mid- to late-nineteenth-century pieces, made in England but loosely imitating royal French style of thirty or forty years previously.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Parts | This object consists of 2 parts.
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Materials and techniques | |
Brief description | A pair of amethyst columns supported by copper alloy or silver rod; gilded copper alloy mounts; porphyry base |
Physical description | A pair of Ionic columns of amethyst, each column supported by copper alloy or silver rod; gilded copper alloy mounts; porphyry base. On the top of each column is a female figure holding out a laurel wreath, in gilded copper alloy. |
Credit line | Bequeathed by John Jones |
Object history | The mounted columns were bequeathed to the Museum in the 1882 will of the businessman and collector John Jones. Nothing is known of their provenance, except that they would have been displayed in his home at 95, Piccadilly. The summary inventory of Jones' collection drawn up after his death in 1882 by Messrs Foster, of 54 Pall Mall, London, includes the columns in a group of 'Objects of Art', and identifies the stone used for the columns as amethyst. The Museum accession register, however, records that this identification was revised on the advice of Professor A. H. Church, Royal Academy Professor of Chemistry, who in a memo to the Museum's director Sir Philip Cunliffe-Owen stated that the stone is 'fluor spar'. Recent examination in the Museum metalwork conservation section has confirmed the stone for the columns is amethyst, as originally identified. |
Summary | These columns were initially attributed to the workshop of the Birmingham industrialist Matthew Boulton, perhaps because subsequent to entering the Museum the stone for the columns was identified as 'fluorspar'. In the later part of the 18th century a rare form of purple and yellow banded fluorite known as blue john, found only in the Treak Cliff Cavern, near Castleton in Derbyshire, became a fashionable material for interior decoration and decorative household objects. Matthew Boulton had attempted (unsuccessfully) to profit from this popularity in 1769 and in the early 1770s by purchasing quantities of stone from the mine, much of which he carved in the form of vases and to which he added gilded metal mounts. However, aside from the fact that the stone of the columns was recently confirmed to be amethyst, the pair of columns formerly in the Jones collection do not correspond to the type of object produced by Bolton and the inspiration for the female figure balanced on a sphere and holding a laurel wreath appears to derive from French models. A gilded bronze candelabrum of 1810 from the workshop of the French bronze founder Pierre-Philippe Thomire (who at that date operated in partnership as Thomire, Duterme & Cie) is in the form of a similar, though much larger, female figure who holds aloft two wreaths, each set with four nozzles for candles, and who balances on a sphere mounted on a short column of polished red marble. It seems likely that the columns from the Jones collection are mid- to late-nineteenth-century pieces, made in England but loosely imitating royal French style of thirty or forty years previously. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | 875-1882 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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