May 21, 2012
Silver Treasures Tour Details

Silver
Treasures
Silver Treasures
 

Silver Treasures

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Silver Treasures
Pier 39 O-3 San Francisco, California 94133
Details:
Antiquity

Pre-Mycenaean

Silver was used in ancient Italy and Greece for personal
ornaments, vessels,jewellery,arrows, weapons and coinage. It was
inlaid and plated. It was also mixed with Gold to produce white
gold as well as being mixed with baser metals.

Examples of ancient jewelry were found in Queen Pu-abi's tomb at
Ur in Sumeria(now called Tall al-Muqayyar), dating from 3000 BC.
In the crypt the queen's body was covered with jewellery made
from gold, silver, lapis lazuli, carnelian,agate and chalcedony
beads.

Aegean lands were rich in precious metals. The considerable
deposits of treasure found in the earliest prehistoric strata on
the site of Troy are not likely to be later than 2000 BC. The
largest of them, called Priam's Treasure, was a large silver cup
containing gold ornaments consisting of elaborate diadems or
pectorals, six bracelets, 60 earrings or hair rings, and nearly
9,000 beads. Silver was widely used in the Greek islands however
only a few simple vessels, rings, pins, and headbands survive.

Mycenaean and Minoan.

Three silver dagger blades were found in a communal tomb at
Kumasa.Silver seals and ornaments of the same age were also found
in these regions. A silver cup found in Gournia dates to circa
2000. Some vases and jugsfrom Mycenae are also made of silver.
Some of the Mycenaean blades are bronze inlaid with

gold, , silver, niello and electrum.

Bronze to the Iron Age

Engraved and embossed silver bowls made by Phoenicians have been
found in Greece. Most of them have elaborate pictorial designs of
Egyptian or Assyrian character and therefore probably foreign to
Greece.

However some simpler types, decorated with rows of animals and
flowers,can hardly be distinguished from the first Hellenic
products. A silver bowl from around the 5th century BC can be
found inthe Metropolitan Museum of Art showing a fine flower
style.

Silver vases and toilet articles have been found beside the more
common bronze in Etruscan tombs. For example, a chased powder box
of the 4th century BC in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Roman

During the 4th century BC, the trend of ornamenting silver
vessels with relief was revived. This type of work, elaborated in
the Hellenistic Age and particularly at Antioch and Alexandria,
remained the common method of decoration for silver articles
until the end of the Roman Empire.

A lot of Roman silverware was buried during the violent last
centuries of the ancient world. The largest, the Boscoreale
treasure (mostly in the Louvre), was accidentally saved by
the same volcanic eruption that destroyed Herculaneum and killed
Pliny in AD 79. A slightly smaller hoard found at Hildesheim (now
in Berlin) also belongs to the early empire. The acquisition and
appreciation of silver plate was a sort of cult in Rome.
Technical names for various kinds of reliefs
were in common use (emblemata, sigilla, crustae.) Weights were
recorded and compared and frequently exaggerated. Large
quantities of bullion came to Rome from their battle victories in
Greece and Asia during the 2nd century BC.

Early Christian and Byzantine

The earliest Christian silverwork closely resembles the pagan
work of the period and uses of the techniques of embossing and
chasing. The design is sometimesclassical, decorated with pagan
scenes.

Most of the silver has been found in Syria, Egypt, Cyprus, Asia
Minor,and Russia. It is mostly chalices, censers, candlesticks,
and bowls and dishes. The techniques of chasing and embossing
were often employed, but abstract patterns and Christian symbols
inlaid in niello were also used. The 6th and 7th centuries saw
the appearance of imperial control stamps,- early forerunners of
hallmarks.

Middle Ages

Carolingian and Ottonian

In the last quarter of the 8th century the design focused on
the human figure and the use of niello (chip-carving technique.)

Examples are the Tassilo Chalice (umlnster Abbey, Austria) and
the Lindau Gospels book cover (Pierpont Morgan Library, New York
City).

Most influential silver design was commissioned by Royalty or the
church.Liturgical plate and reliquaries, altar crosses, and the
like underwent no fundamental change; Ottonian work of the later
10th and 11th centuries can be distinguished from that of the 9th
only in the development of style. For example, the larger, more
massive figures, with their strict pattern of folds, on the
golden altar (c. 1023) given by Henry II to Basel
Minster (Muse de Cluny, Paris), are markedly different from the
nervous, elongated figures of the Carolingian period.

Romanesque

In the 12th century the church was the chief patron of the arts,
and the work was carried out in the larger monasteries. Under the
direction of such great churchmen as Henry, bishop of Winchester,
and Abbot Suger of Saint-Denis, near Paris, a new emphasis was
given to subject matter and symbolism.

Gold and silver continued to be used as rich settings for enamels
as the framework of portable altars, or small devotional diptychs
or triptychs and shrines such as the shrine of St. Heribert at
Deutz (c. 1160) and Nicholas
of Verdun's Shrine of the Three Kings at Cologne (c. 1200).


The growing naturalism of the 13th century is notable in the work
of Nicholas' follower Hugo d'Oignies, whose reliquary for the rib
of St. Peter at Namur(1228) foreshadows the partly crystal
reliquaries in which the freestanding relic is exposed to the
view of the faithful; it is decorated with Hugo's
particularly fine filigree and enriched by naturalistic cutout
leaves and little cast animals and birds.

The increasing wealth of the royal courts, of the aristocracy,
and, later, of the merchants led to the establishment of secular
workshops in the great cities and the foundation of
confraternities, or guilds, of silversmiths, the first being that
of Paris in 1202.

The late Gothic saw an increased output of secular silver because
of the rise of the middle classes. The English mazers (wooden
drinking bowls with silver mounts) and the silver spoons with a
large variety of finials are examples of this more modest plate.
Numerous large reliquaries and altar
plate of all kinds were still produced. At the end of the Middle
Ages the style of these pieces and of secular plate developed
more distinctive nationalcharacteristics, strongly influenced by
architectural style: in England,by the geometric patterns of the
Perpendicular; in Germany, by heavy and
bizarre themes of almost Baroque exuberance; and in France, by
the fragile elegance of the Flamboyant.

The purity standards of silver became rigorously controlled, and
hallmarking was enforced; the marking of silver in England,
especially, was carefully observed.

In the Far East the skills of thesilversmith were unsurpassed as
is evident from this solid silver bowl (the photographs are 4x
magnification of original item) made circa 1398 in Kampochea
(Cambodia) detailing the wars with neighbouring Thai rulers.

Islam

The use of gold and silver in Islam lands was limited because it
was forbidden by the Koran. Although the prohibition
was often ignored, the great value of such objects led to their
early destruction and melting down. Islamic jewelry of the early
period is therefore extremely rare, represented only by a few
items, such as buckles and bracelets of the Mongol periods and
such pieces as the Gerona silver chest in Spain and the Berlin
silver tankard of the 13th century, with embossed reliefs of
animal friezes.

Renaissance to modern

16th century

Using Silver from the New Americas, Spanish silversmiths,
plateria, gave their name to the heavily ornamented style of the
period, Plateresque. England was also abundant in 16th-century
secular silver, but church plate was mostly destroyed during the
Reformation.

Baroque

Huguenot silversmiths who left France after the revocation of the
Edict of Nantes in 1685 brought new standards of taste and
craftsmanship wherever they settled particularly in England,
where the foremost names of the late 17th and earlier 18th
centuries were of French origin: Pierre Harache, Pierre Platel,
David Willaume, Simon Pantin, Paul de Lamerie, Paul Crespin, to
mention but a few.Silver furniture, a feature of the state rooms
at Versailles, became fashionable among Royalty and noblemen. It
was constructed of silver plates attached to
a wooden frame. Each suite contained a dressing table, a looking
glasss and a pair of candlestands. In France such furniture did
not survive the Revolution but much remains in England, Denmark,
Germany, and Russia.

In the far east, Chinese silversmiths produced some of the most
elegant and beautifully crafted silver jewellery some of which
was exported to the Royalty of Russia.

18th century

Early 18th-century English work combined functional simplicity
with grace of form, while the work of Dutch and German goldsmiths
is in a similar style but of less pleasing proportions. The
success of the English work, however,
is due in part to the destruction of all but a fraction of French
silver of the same period. English silver in the 18th-century
classical style of Robert and James Adam is of unequal merit
owing to the use of industrial methods by some large producers.

Colonial America

Silversmithing in the New World in the colonial period is chiefly
from England. In North America it was first brought to New
England by English craftsmen in the 17th century. The most
important centres were Boston, Newport, New York City,
Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Annapolis. Outstanding collections
include the Mabel Brady Garvan collection at Yale University and
those in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the American
Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and in the Philadelphia
Museum of Art. North American colonial silver is distinguished
for its simplicity and graceful forms, copied or adapted from
English silver of the period. Meanwhile the colonial silver of
Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Peru, Chile, and Bolivia,
while mostly Spanish in concept, shows a blending of Iberian
designs and forms,with indigenous influences that trace back to
pre-Hispanic times. Most of these relics survive in churches as
sacramental vessels.

19th century

Napoleon's empire brought French fashions back into prominence
and the was widely followed on the Continent. England created
their own more robust version of the Empire style.A recognizable
Victorian style evolved in particular high-quality buttons,
coins, sterling silver, and Sheffield
plate, establishing new high standards of design and of factory
management and welfare services. This was followed by the craft
revival associated with William Morris and the distinctive Art
Nouveau style.

Modern

Factories evolved using modern equipment for example,laser stone
cutting,stamping, pressing,spinning, casting, and mechanical
polishing account. These factories supply nearly all
high street jewellery retailers. The evolution of style is now
dictated by the buying public. Little has changed in the design
of gold engagement or wedding rings however fashion demands have
created an enviroment were the most lively designs are often
those for costume and silver jewelry.

In Paris, designs by Rene Lalique inspired Art Nouveau, whilst in
Moscow, Peter Carl Faberge set a superb standard of craftsmanship
for small ornaments. In Denmark, Georg Jensen, with Johan Rohde
and others achieved not only an individual Danish style but built
up several factories with retail outlets across the world, thus
proving that good modern design in silver
jewellery need not be confined to artists' studios.

Last Tour Update: May 18, 2012
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