Tea Chest thumbnail 1
Tea Chest thumbnail 2
+5
images
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Furniture, Room 133, The Dr Susan Weber Gallery

This object consists of 2 parts, some of which may be located elsewhere.

Tea Chest

ca. 1745 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The elegant boxes that we now call tea caddies were known as tea chests in the 18th century. Until the second half of the century, tea remained a luxurious and expensive commodity. The fashionable design of tea chests reflected its value, while the locks fitted to the chests kept the tea secure. This tea chest is veneered in fine woods imported from islands in the Indian Ocean and the Caribbean. The maker also used engraved brass plaques to enliven the design. Only a few workshops in London used engraved brass plaques in this way at the time. The firm of Landall & Gordon published a trade card that illustrates a very similar tea chest, and they may have been the makers of this one.


Object details

Category
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Tea Chest
  • Key
Materials and techniques
Veneered with mahog
Brief description
Tea chest of mahogany and oak, veneered in mahogany, tulipwood and with plaques of engraved brass, with gilt-brass mounts. British. Possibly made by Landall & Gordon, ca. 1745
Physical description
Tea chest of bombé (swelling), sarcophagus form with a hinged lid, the carcase of mahogany and oak, veneered with mahogany, tulipwood and engraved brass plaques. and set with brass and gilt-brass mounts; key of steel
.
Dimensions
  • Length: 28.6cm
  • Height: 17.8cm
Gallery label
  • [Label from the Channon Exhibition, Leeds and London] TEA CHEST Mahogany with padouk cross-banding and brass inlay Attributed to Thomas Landall and John Gordon, London, c. 1745 The bombé form, cast lion's paw feet, brass corner strings and pattern of foliate corner ornaments on the top and sides are closely similar to the inlaid decoration on a tea chest featured on Landall and Gordon's trade card and on another tea chest in a private collection. Acquired by the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1965 (W.11-1965)(1994)
  • Tea chest About 1745 Possibly by Landall & Gordon (active about 1740–8) England (London) Carcase: mahogany, oak and cherry Veneer: mahogany, tulipwood and brass Mounts: gilded brass Lid: lined with red silk and silver braid (both original) Key: steel Museum no. W.11-1965 Inlay is often combined with veneering. Here, veneers of richly figured woods were first glued to the curved wooden carcase, then recesses were cut for the motifs of sawn sheet brass. Inlaying into a curved surface required particular skill to achieve a close fit. (01/12/2012)
Object history
Purchased from H. Blairman & Sons Ltd, (Nominal File: Blairman, H. & Sons, MA/1/B1600), 15 June 1965 from the Antique Dealers' Fair. A note in Peter Thornton's hand makes the case for its acquisition 'because it is brass-inlaid and must be an example of the oeuvre of John Channon, about whom Mr Hayward has been writing in the 'Bulletin'. It will be mentioned in the follow-up article Mr. Hayward is now composing.'
Historical context
Furniture of mahogany and occasionally of padouk, inlaid with brass plaques, was a relatively short-lived phenomenon during the 18th century in England. The earliest pieces appear to date from the 1730s and by the middle of the century, the fashion had faded. The technique is associated with the London cabinet-maker John Channon (1711-1779), who signed two monumental bookcases for Powderham Castle, Devon, in 1740 (V&A museum no. W.1&A-1987) but was practised by several other makers. It was associated with the movement between Germany and London of young German cabinet-makers to work in Britain, particularly Abraham Roentgen (1711-1793 ) and Johann Friedrich (Frederick) Hintz ( ca. 1711-1772 ). It is still unclear whether they learned this technique in London, or brought the idea of it with them but Abraham Roentgen at least, made furniture with this technique after his return to Germany.

The application of the technique varied from simple brass stringing to the inlay of complex, pierced motifs, and sometimes large plaques that were engraved like printing plates, the lines highlighted with dark mastic. These motifs sometimes followed published engravings.

In the late 1740s, the London firm of Landall & Gordon published a trade card illustrating a very similar tea chest to this one and it is attributed to them on that account.
Production
Attributed to Landall & Gordon by reason of its similarity to the design of a tea chest illustrated on their trade card, published ca. 1745. A copy is in the British Museum
Summary
The elegant boxes that we now call tea caddies were known as tea chests in the 18th century. Until the second half of the century, tea remained a luxurious and expensive commodity. The fashionable design of tea chests reflected its value, while the locks fitted to the chests kept the tea secure. This tea chest is veneered in fine woods imported from islands in the Indian Ocean and the Caribbean. The maker also used engraved brass plaques to enliven the design. Only a few workshops in London used engraved brass plaques in this way at the time. The firm of Landall & Gordon published a trade card that illustrates a very similar tea chest, and they may have been the makers of this one.
Bibliographic references
  • Gilbert, Christopher and Tessa Murdoch (Eds.), John Channon and Brass-inlaid Furniture 1730-1760, New Haven and London, Yale University Press in Association with Leeds City Art Galleries and the Victoria and Albert Museum, 1993 pp.121-2
  • Walkling, Gillian, Tea Caddies, 1985, pl. 33
  • Hayward, John, 'The Channon Family of Exeter and London', in Victoria and Albert Museum Bulletin, April 1966, vol. II, no. 2, pp. 64-70, fig.5.
  • John Cornforth, 'Puzzles in Brass', Country Life, vol. CLXXXVII, 11 November 1993, pp. 44-45, fig.3.
Collection
Accession number
W.11:1 to 2-1965

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Record createdMarch 5, 2003
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