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Hispano-Moresque

Stained Glass Design
ca. 1870 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

As carried out during the late 1860s and 1870s, the interior of the Lecture Theatre block of the Victoria and Albert Museum - containing the Lecture Theatre, Ceramic Gallery (now the Silver Gallery, Rooms 65-69) and refreshment rooms - was elaborately decorated. This pen and ink drawing comprises one of William Bell Scott’s designs for the fourteen stained-glass windows in the Ceramic Gallery. Henry Cole, the first director of the Museum, was responsible for the theme. Mirroring the arrangement of ceramic items within the gallery, the stained-glass windows depicted historical periods of ceramic manufacture: with the Alhambra glimpsed in the background of the upper right-hand window light, shown here is Hispano-Moresque ceramic production. Scott executed the designs by painting onto glass panes with a brush, keeping the windows virtually free of colour (yellow being the only stain used) so as not to darken the gallery. Scott also designed two stained-glass windows for the landings of the two staircases leading up from the Ceramic Gallery to the Lecture Theatre.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleHispano-Moresque
Materials and techniques
Pen and ink with watercolour
Brief description
Design for Victoria and Albert Museum by William Bell Scott, Ceramic Gallery, stained glass window (Hispano-Moresque), ca. 1870
Physical description
Small-scale pen and ink drawing with watercolour on paper. Arranged as two stacked pairs of yellow-bordered rectangular window, with a further window light indicated above, this design for a stained-glass window in the Ceramic Gallery (now the Silver Gallery, Rooms 65-69) is labelled ‘The Alhambra Vase &c, Commerce of the Moors of Valencia’. In the top left window light, three standing figures and one seated figure work around the flames belonging to a furnace for lustre ware. In the top right window light, the Alhambra vase is borne on poles carried between two figures; behind, two men work on an architectural screen of multifoil ogee arches. Below, the lower two window lights show a mercantile scene with ships in the background, and, in the foreground, a seated figure selling Moorish vases and dishes. Drawn to a larger scale and coloured with yellow watercolour, to the side is a detail of the geometric border design. Annotated; subject matter listed on mount.
Dimensions
  • Height: 25.5cm
  • Width: 17.9cm
Place depicted
Summary
As carried out during the late 1860s and 1870s, the interior of the Lecture Theatre block of the Victoria and Albert Museum - containing the Lecture Theatre, Ceramic Gallery (now the Silver Gallery, Rooms 65-69) and refreshment rooms - was elaborately decorated. This pen and ink drawing comprises one of William Bell Scott’s designs for the fourteen stained-glass windows in the Ceramic Gallery. Henry Cole, the first director of the Museum, was responsible for the theme. Mirroring the arrangement of ceramic items within the gallery, the stained-glass windows depicted historical periods of ceramic manufacture: with the Alhambra glimpsed in the background of the upper right-hand window light, shown here is Hispano-Moresque ceramic production. Scott executed the designs by painting onto glass panes with a brush, keeping the windows virtually free of colour (yellow being the only stain used) so as not to darken the gallery. Scott also designed two stained-glass windows for the landings of the two staircases leading up from the Ceramic Gallery to the Lecture Theatre.
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
Physick, John. The Victoria and Albert Museum: The History of Its Building. London: The Victoria & Albert Museum, 1982.
Collection
Accession number
8099:9

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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