Peg Tankard

Peter Rohde, Polish, active 1654 - 1677

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third quarter of the 17th century

Silver gilt

Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Gift of Ralph Sylvester Bartlett, Class of 1889

159.2.19475

Geography

Place Made: Poland, Europe

Period

1600-1800

Object Name

Tools and Equipment: Food Service

Research Area

Decorative Arts

Not on view

Label

These five vessels for food and drink include golden elements that elevate them above everyday tableware. For some, like the Polish tankard or the beaker with eight sibyls, the gilding adds to the significance of the decorative subject: the tankard bears the coat-of-arms of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, while the sibyls on the beaker are Grecian prophetesses who were believed to predict the birth of Christ. Similarly, the gilded border on the Sèvres porcelain plate reflects the luxury of the Palace of Versailles in France on an object that could be collected to evoke memories of a past trip or to function as a form of imaginary travel.

A combination of technical expertise and valuable material could also elevate a common object, such as a cup or ewer. Czech glassmakers honed the ability to enclose thin sheets of gold between two layers of blown glass to craft highly desirable pieces like the beaker with Saint Mark, here shown with its protective case. The elaborately decorated ewer, in contrast, was the product of makers from several different geographic traditions—not only the Netherlandish metalworkers who cast the body and the Syrian artisans who added the engraved and punched decoration but also the later 19th-century gilder who adapted the ewer to suit changing tastes that favored bright gold surfaces.

From the 2024 exhibition Gold: Materiality, Morality, and Metaphor, curated by Ashley Offill, Curator of Collections

Exhibition History

A Space for Dialogue 42, The Art of Drinking, Four Thousand Years of Celebration and Condemnation of Alcohol Use in the Western World, Ben O'Donnell, Class of 2008, Class of 1954 Intern, Main Lobby, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, December 19, 2007-February 17, 2008.

Gold: Materiality, Morality, and Metaphor, Harrington Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, February 14, 2024.

Publication History

Marc Rosenberg, Der goldschmiede Merkzeichen, 1923, 2:8, no. 1560c.

Ben O'Donnell, A Space for Dialogue 42, The Art of Drinking, Four Thousand Years of Celebration and Condemnation of Alcohol Use in the Western World, Hanover, New Hampshire: Dartmouth College, 2007, ill. cover.

Provenance

Collected by Ralph Sylvester Bartlett (1866-1960); given to present collection, 1959.

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