Rosenborg Lion
Lion
ca. 1885 (made)
ca. 1885 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This enchanting figure reproduces one of the three silver lions--one seated, one standing and one crouching--made between 1665 and 1670 by the Copenhagen silversmith Ferdinand Kyblich to 'protect' the royal Danish thrones at Rosenborg Castle. The lions symbolize the Great Belt, the Little Belt and the Sound, the three territorial boundaries that then demarcated Scandinavian sovereignty.
Electrotype copies of metalwork, particularly goldsmith's work, formed an important part of the Museum's growing collection of reproductions, complementing the plaster casts and photographs of original works. From the 1840s Birmingham-based Elkington & Co. dominated the English trade in electrotyping--an electrical equivalent of casting--and many of the Museum's electrotypes, including these two lions, were produced by Elkington in the 1870s and 1880s. The firm was particularly successful with large-scale electrotypes, which are technically very difficult to make.
Electrotypes--also called Galvanoplastic copies, named for Luigi Galvini (Italian, 1737-1798), whose early experiments stimulated research on electricity--are closely related to electroplating. A mould (initially of wax, but later of metal) is taken from the object to be reproduced; copper is deposited on the mould in a plating vat; the mould is then removed, revealing a reproduction in copper of the original work. Ordinarily, the copper reproduction would be gilded or silver (as with the lions) to imitate the material of the original.
Electrotype copies of metalwork, particularly goldsmith's work, formed an important part of the Museum's growing collection of reproductions, complementing the plaster casts and photographs of original works. From the 1840s Birmingham-based Elkington & Co. dominated the English trade in electrotyping--an electrical equivalent of casting--and many of the Museum's electrotypes, including these two lions, were produced by Elkington in the 1870s and 1880s. The firm was particularly successful with large-scale electrotypes, which are technically very difficult to make.
Electrotypes--also called Galvanoplastic copies, named for Luigi Galvini (Italian, 1737-1798), whose early experiments stimulated research on electricity--are closely related to electroplating. A mould (initially of wax, but later of metal) is taken from the object to be reproduced; copper is deposited on the mould in a plating vat; the mould is then removed, revealing a reproduction in copper of the original work. Ordinarily, the copper reproduction would be gilded or silver (as with the lions) to imitate the material of the original.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Rosenborg Lion (popular title) |
Materials and techniques | Electroplated copper, silvered |
Brief description | Electrotype copy of a silver lion in Rosenborg Castle, Copenhagen, electroplated copper, silvered, Birmingham, Elkington & Co., ca. 1885 |
Physical description | Electrotype Copies of a Rosenborg Castle Lion, electroplated copper, silvered, 98 x 170 x 64cm. |
Dimensions |
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Object history | From Electrotypes register: “LION. The original of silver, oxidised, is in the Rosenborg Castle, Copenhagen. It stands with two others before the king’s throne as symbols of the national protection, the Great Belt, the Little Belt and the Sound. Danish. 1670. ... Messrs. Elkington and Co., £100”. Originals made by Ferdinand Kyblich, Copenhagen |
Subject depicted | |
Association | |
Summary | This enchanting figure reproduces one of the three silver lions--one seated, one standing and one crouching--made between 1665 and 1670 by the Copenhagen silversmith Ferdinand Kyblich to 'protect' the royal Danish thrones at Rosenborg Castle. The lions symbolize the Great Belt, the Little Belt and the Sound, the three territorial boundaries that then demarcated Scandinavian sovereignty. Electrotype copies of metalwork, particularly goldsmith's work, formed an important part of the Museum's growing collection of reproductions, complementing the plaster casts and photographs of original works. From the 1840s Birmingham-based Elkington & Co. dominated the English trade in electrotyping--an electrical equivalent of casting--and many of the Museum's electrotypes, including these two lions, were produced by Elkington in the 1870s and 1880s. The firm was particularly successful with large-scale electrotypes, which are technically very difficult to make. Electrotypes--also called Galvanoplastic copies, named for Luigi Galvini (Italian, 1737-1798), whose early experiments stimulated research on electricity--are closely related to electroplating. A mould (initially of wax, but later of metal) is taken from the object to be reproduced; copper is deposited on the mould in a plating vat; the mould is then removed, revealing a reproduction in copper of the original work. Ordinarily, the copper reproduction would be gilded or silver (as with the lions) to imitate the material of the original. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | REPRO.1885-194 |
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Record created | November 10, 2003 |
Record URL |
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