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Curfew thumbnail 2
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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Europe 1600-1815, Room 7, The Sheikha Amna Bint Mohammed Al Thani Gallery

Curfew

17th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This curfew is a metal cover designed to enclose the embers of a fire at the end of the day. The curfew, from the French couvre-feu (fire cover) enabled the embers to be kept smouldering at night so that the fire could be re-lit easily the following morning with a puff of the bellows. Some curfews had ventiliation holes to allow small amounts of air to enter so that the fire was not completely starved of oxygen. This example is typical of those produced in the Netherlands and England during the second half of the 17th century.

Curfews were usually made in sheet brass or copper. This example is a fine quality example that would have furnished a wealthy middle class home. It is decorated in repoussé, a type of embossed decoration on metal, which is hammered from the back to create a design in relief. This fireguard has a mixture of embossed and engraved decoration to create areas of high contrast and reflection. The decoration features three male heads within wreaths and floral scrollwork. The curfew is expressive of a long tradition of embossed brasswork in the Netherlands and similar decotation can also be found on brass buffet dishes and warming pan lids. Surviving curfews are rare.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Brass, repoussé (embossed), chased, punched, folded and rivetted.
Brief description
Curfew or fire-guard, in brass decorated in repoussé with three male heads within wreaths, The Netherlands, ca. 1685, Maker unknown
Physical description
Curfew, or fire-guard, of brass, embossed and punched with bold ornament of three male heads within laurel wreaths, two facing to ther left and one to the right, flanked by floral scroll-work including sunflowers and acanthus. The borders are composed of bands of acanthus leaf pattern rivetted to the main body of the curfew. Two holes in the surface at the top of the acanthus leaves between the heads may be deliberate ventilation holes as they are very regular in form, whereas other holes in the surface appear to the the result of wear and tear on embossed areas of the brass that have stretched the metal too thinly. The handle was made from a strip of brass embossed with small domes, its sides folded over to reinforce them, and has been bent at each end and rivetted to the top of the curfew.
Dimensions
  • Across widest point at back of object width: 60.7cm
  • From base to top of handle height: 39.5cm
  • From centre of front to centre of back depth: 30.5cm
Gallery label
Curfew About 1685 The fireplace was the focal point of a room. It was the primary source of heat and also helped to light rooms after the sun had set. Curfews were used to cover the embers of a fire at the end of the day to keep them smouldering overnight. This enabled the servant or housewife to rekindle the fire easily the following morning with a puff of the bellows. Dutch Republic, now the Netherlands Brass(09.12.2015)
Object history
A curfew is a metal cover designed to enclose the embers of a fire at the end of the day. To have a fire burning all night was both extravagant and dangerous. The curfew, from the French couvre-feu (fire cover) enabled the embers to be kept smouldering at night so that the fire could be re-lit easily the following morning with a puff of the bellows. Some curfews had ventiliation holes to allow small amounts of air to enter so that the fire was not completely starved of oxygen.

The fireplaces was the focal point of the room. It was not only the primary source of heat but also of light after the sun had set. Fireplace furniture, including firedogs, curfews, and firetools, was often produced in brass to take advantage of its highly reflective qualities.

Curfews were usually made in sheet brass or copper. This example is a fine quality example that would have furnished a wealthy middle class home. It is decorated in repoussé, a type of embossed decoration on metal, which is hammered from the back to create a design in relief. This fireguard has a mixture of embossed and engraved decoration to create areas of high contrast and reflection. The decoration features three male heads within wreaths and floral scrollwork. The curfew is expressive of a long tradition of embossed brasswork in the Netherlands and similar decotation can also be found on brass buffet dishes and warming pan lids. Surviving curfews are rare.

Contemporary depictions of curfews at or near the fireplace are extremely rare, suggesting they may have been kept out of the room when not in use. One example of a Dutch interior showing the family of a wealthy burgher in a bedchamber shows the curfew in the fireplace with a linen cloth draped over it for insulation, from which it may be inferred that the painting shows an early morning scene before the fire had been raked and re-stoked. (Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Geneva: see Peter Thornton, <u>Authentic Decor: The Domestic Interior 1620-1920</u>, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1984, p. 27, cat. 16). The bright curfew draws the viewer's eye into the painting and its presence emphasises the vulnerability of the expensive carpets and hangings decorating the bed, mantelpiece and table.

The Museum bought the curfew from the Hailstone Collection in 1891 for £16.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This curfew is a metal cover designed to enclose the embers of a fire at the end of the day. The curfew, from the French couvre-feu (fire cover) enabled the embers to be kept smouldering at night so that the fire could be re-lit easily the following morning with a puff of the bellows. Some curfews had ventiliation holes to allow small amounts of air to enter so that the fire was not completely starved of oxygen. This example is typical of those produced in the Netherlands and England during the second half of the 17th century.

Curfews were usually made in sheet brass or copper. This example is a fine quality example that would have furnished a wealthy middle class home. It is decorated in repoussé, a type of embossed decoration on metal, which is hammered from the back to create a design in relief. This fireguard has a mixture of embossed and engraved decoration to create areas of high contrast and reflection. The decoration features three male heads within wreaths and floral scrollwork. The curfew is expressive of a long tradition of embossed brasswork in the Netherlands and similar decotation can also be found on brass buffet dishes and warming pan lids. Surviving curfews are rare.
Bibliographic references
  • Turner, Eric An Introduction to Brass, London, HMSO, 1982, pp. 32-3 ill. ISBN 0112903762
  • Rupert Gentle and Rachael Feild, Domestic Metalwork 1640-1820, Antique Collectors Club, 1998, p. 329, ill.
  • Rupert Gentle and Rachael Feild, English Domestic Brass 1680-1810 and the History of its Origins, Paul Elek, London, 1975, p. 147, ill. fig. 138
  • Peter Thornton, Authentic Decor: The Domestic Interior 1620-1920, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1984, p. 27, cat. 16
Collection
Accession number
94-1891

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Record createdJanuary 26, 2004
Record URL
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