| The gold and treasury galleries
of the Gilbert Collection contain a dazzling display of rarities.
Although many of the items conform to a recognisable shape and seem
to have had a practical use, they were often made purely for display
and, as a result, remain in pristine condition.
Some objects in the collection were specially
made for a treasury or display room; a 16th century jewelled mother
of pearl partridge and a nef from Regensburg were deliberately made
as confections, or as a way of displaying natural curiosities of
exceptional beauty or rarity. While other items of a supposedly
practical nature are no less decorative; two pairs of massive silver
gates are testimony to the power of the Russian Orthodox Church
under the Tsars, while a pair of howdahs (chairs for riding elephants)
evoke equally strong impressions of British Imperial rule in India.
While most of the collection dates from
the 16th to the 19th centuries, a few items are extraordinary early
survivors, notably, an Anatolian gold ewer from the third millennium
BC. A distinctive feature of the collection is its focus on fine
craftsmanship and it is much richer in ornamental objects than in
utilitarian wares.
The
information about objects in the gold & treasury section is
drawn largely from The Gilbert Collection of Gold and Silver
by Timothy B Schroder, with contributions by Philippa Glanville,
Janice Leoshko and Alla Theodora Hall. It is published by Los Angeles
County Museum of Art and distributed in the UK by Thames and Hudson
Ltd., ISBN 0-500-01452-3. Copyright ©1988 by Museum Associates,
Los Angeles County Museum of Art. All rights reserved.
The Gilbert Collection of Gold and
Silver is usually available from the Gilbert Collection shop
at Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 1LA.
back to the
collection |

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| The Gilbert Collection treasury contains
fabulous objects made for kings, queens, emperors and maharajas. |
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