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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ironwork, Room 114c

Lock

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

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’.

Wilkes is perhaps the most famous of all the English locksmiths of this period because several of his ingenious detector locks have survived (see V&A Museum No. M.109-1926).


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Steel, brass, forged and chiselled, blued
Brief description
Rim lock of steel with pierced brass case, signed "Johannes Wilkes de Birmingham Fecit", England, Birmingham, ca. 1680
Physical description
Door lock and hasp with steel mechanism and blued steel covering plate in rectangular pierced brass case, the border engraved with leaves and scrolls, the pierced ornament with twirling vines, sunflowers and tulips. The lower border is signed, "Johannes Wilkes de Birmingham Fecit".
Dimensions
  • With catch length: 14.1cm
  • Height: 12.1cm
  • With bolts depth: 7.8cm
  • Case depth: 2.3cm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
"Johannes Wilkes de Birmingham Fecit". (Lower border signed)
Translation
Johannes Wilke of Birmingham made
Gallery label
LOCK AND HINGE, steel, originally blued, and engraved brass, England; c. 1695, made by John Wilkes of Birmingham (d. 1733) Signed IOHANNES WILKES DE BIRMINGHAM FECIT. Museum No. 5405-1859(07/1994)
Object history
This lock has open scrollwork in brass contrasting with a ‘blued’ steel base. This type of lock is a rim lock, with its mechanism entirely enclosed in a case to be mounted on a door.

This lock has four bolts to control security levels. The machanism of an identical lock in the Peter Phillips Collection was described by its owner as follows: "The master of the house could select, by turning the small knob at the top of the lock, the number of bolts (1 to 4) that he wished to put into operation. When set at number 4, which is maximum for locking the top 4 bolts are locked out by just turn of the key, but 4 turns of the key are required to withdraw these, ie. one at a time! There is however literally a "sting in the tail" of the top bolt, the one last withdrawn, for it triggers off the twin anti-burglar bottom bolts, and these can only be unlocked by a reverse action of the correct key."

The Museum bought this lock for £6 in 1859.
Historical context
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.

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 necessarily matching exactly. On this example, even the inner workings are finely decorated.

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 complicated mechanisms of locks made rooms secure while their intricate patterns in steel and brass turned their locks into works of art. 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'.
Production
A lock with an identical pierced and engraved case signed 'John Webar Fecit" was in the Josiah Parkes Collection in Willenhall suggesting Wilkes may have used the same casemaker.
Subjects depicted
Summary
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’.

Wilkes is perhaps the most famous of all the English locksmiths of this period because several of his ingenious detector locks have survived (see V&A Museum No. M.109-1926).
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.13
  • Bracegirdle, C. Door Furniture. Homes and Gardens. Feb. 1972. p.80-81.
  • Lenygon, F. Decoration in England. London, 1914. pp.239-287. Fig.291, p.256.
Collection
Accession number
5405-1859

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
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