Drinking Glass
1602 (dated)
Place of origin |
When this glass was acquired by the Museum in 1925, the name Barbara Potters was understood to be English and the glass was attributed to the London Glasshouse of Jerome Bowes (d. 1616). However, the name Barbara Potters is also a Dutch name, and comparable glasses discovered since, point at a firm attribution to the Southern Netherlands, probably Antwerp.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Blown glass, mould-blown stem, diamond-point engraved, with traces of gilt |
Brief description | Drinking glass, diamond-point engraved with inscription 'BARBARA POTTERS', with traces of gilding, Netherlands, dated 1602 |
Physical description | Drinking glass on a tall mould-blown stem, diamond-point engraved with inscription 'BARBARA POTTERS', with traces of gilding, Netherlands, dated 1602 |
Dimensions |
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Styles | |
Marks and inscriptions | 'BARBARA POTTERS 1602' Note decoration |
Credit line | Given by C. Rees-Price, Esq. and Mrs Jeanie H. R. Price. |
Production | A glass in the Musée de la Chartreuse in Douai, dated 1608 is very close in engraving style and probably by the same hand. It is a typically Southern Netherlandish glass with applied masks and prunts with turquois beads with an inscription in French. Cf. a fragment with a Dutch adage engraved by the same hand was excavated at the 'Cour Napoléon" at the Louvre in Paris. (G. Barrera in Annales du 12e congres AIHV, Vienna 1991, p. 373, fig. 2) A Dutch attribution was first given to the Barbara Potters glass by FGAM Smit in his Line-engraved glass, Peterborough 1994, p. 1. Apart from the excavated example, Smits points out that Barbara Potters(dochter) is Dutch name. The glass was prevously thought to be English. |
Summary | When this glass was acquired by the Museum in 1925, the name Barbara Potters was understood to be English and the glass was attributed to the London Glasshouse of Jerome Bowes (d. 1616). However, the name Barbara Potters is also a Dutch name, and comparable glasses discovered since, point at a firm attribution to the Southern Netherlands, probably Antwerp. |
Bibliographic references |
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Other number | 6582 - Glass gallery number |
Collection | |
Accession number | C.575-1925 |
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Record created | December 13, 1997 |
Record URL |
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