Standing Cup thumbnail 1
Standing Cup thumbnail 2
+7
images
On display
Image of Gallery in South Kensington

Standing Cup

1909-1910 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The firm Child & Child, goldsmiths and jewellers were one of the most artistically prestigious operating in the Edwardian era. Their premises were in Thurloe Street, opposite the front entrance to the Museum. They were regularly patronised by the painters Sir Edward Burne Jones, William Holman Hunt and the architect, Edwin Lutyens as well as several members of the Royal Family. Despite being patronized by the avant garde, their reputation was for silver and jewellery in an historicist manner.

Object details

Category
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Standing Cup and Cover
  • Lid for a Standing Cup
Materials and techniques
Silver with enamel and niello
Brief description
Silver, with enamel and niello, London hallmarks for 1909-10, mark of Child & Child.
Physical description
Cup chased with the death of Wolfe, a durbar and a naval engagement, beneath which are three sporting scenes in niello, knop formed of masks and mermaids; at the bottom of the stem a band of red, white and blue enamel inscribed UNITY GIVES STRENGTH; spreading foot with masks, birds and strapwork. Domed cover chased with a beaver, an ostrich and a kangaroo, surmounted by a winged female figure holding an orb and a sheathed sword (the sword can be drawn).
Dimensions
  • Height: 14in
  • Diameter: 3.5in
  • Cover diameter: 4.5in
Marks and inscriptions
  • Mark “HC” and “Child & Child London S.W.”, London hallmark for 1909-10
  • Band at the bottom: Unity gives strength
  • The three scenes chased on the body of the cup are the death of Wolfe (Quebec), an Indian durbar and a naval engagement. The Empire theme is continued on the cover with the chased figures of an ostrich for Africa, a beaver for Canada and a kangaroo for Australia.
Gallery label
(18/02/2000)
9 CUP AND COVER
Silver, enamel and niello
London 1909-10
Marks H C, CHILD & CHILD LONDON SW
The three scenes chased on the body of the cup are the death of Wolfe (Quebec), an Indian durbar and a naval engagement. The Empire theme is continued on the cover with the chased figures of an ostrich for Africa, a beaver for Canada and a kangaroo for Australia.

The firm of Child and Child, goldsmiths and jewellers were one of the most artistically prestigious operating in the Edwardian era. Their premises were in Thurloe Street, opposite the front entrance to the Museum. They were regularly patronised by the painters Sir Edward Burne Jones, William Holman Hunt and the architect, Edwin Lutyens as well as several members of the Royal Family. Despite being patronized by the avant-garde, their reputation was for silver and jewellery in an historicist manner.
Child Bequest
M.208-1930
Credit line
Child Bequest
Object history
Child Bequest
The firm Child & Child, goldsmiths and jewellers were one of the most artistically prestigious operating in the Edwardian era. Their premises were in Thurloe Street, opposite the front entrance to the Museum. They were regularly patronised by the painters Sir Edward Burne Jones, William Holman Hunt and the architect, Edwin Lutyens as well as several members of the Royal Family. Despite being patronized by the avant garde, their reputation was for silver and jewellery in an historicist manner.
Historical context
EDWARDIAN SILVER

Despite relentless commercial pressures and a conservative public which favoured historicist revivals, innovations did emerge in European silverware in the early years of the 20th century prior to the First World War. The cup and cover (1909-10) by Child & Child of Thurloe Place, South Kensington, in a revived German Renaissance manner illustrates the prevailing mainstream taste for historicism while the Painter and Stainers Cup, designed by CR Ashbee for Harris Heal (1900-01) is a very contemporary and subtle restatement of a 17th-century design and epitomises the essence of the British Arts and Crafts movement.

By 1900, Ashbee and his Guild of Handicraft had a achieved a stylistic maturity. For a while the Guild even showed a modest profit but events were moving swiftly. In the 1890s the work produced by the Guild struck a fresh and original note. By the 1900s, Ashbee was to witness others adapting his ideas and extending them further. The workshops of Henry Wilson, Nelson Dawson and Edward Spencer of the Artificer's Guild, Omar Ramsden and in Denmark, Michelsen and Georg Jensen began to produce work that was richer and more self assured than the austere, products of the Guild of Handicraft. These firms successfully popularised the Arts and Crafts philosophy and occasionally incorporated Art Nouveau tendencies. The retailer A.L. Liberty of Regent Street with his Cymric range of silver and jewellery was the amongst the most successful and all remained commercially viable long after the demise of the Guild in 1908.

(Graphic panel: the Silver Galleries)
Summary
The firm Child & Child, goldsmiths and jewellers were one of the most artistically prestigious operating in the Edwardian era. Their premises were in Thurloe Street, opposite the front entrance to the Museum. They were regularly patronised by the painters Sir Edward Burne Jones, William Holman Hunt and the architect, Edwin Lutyens as well as several members of the Royal Family. Despite being patronized by the avant garde, their reputation was for silver and jewellery in an historicist manner.
Collection
Accession number
M.208&A-1930

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Record createdMarch 3, 2004
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