Memorial Guild Cup (Adam van Vianen)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Memorial_Guild_Cup_(Adam_van_Vianen)
The Memorial Guild Cup by Adam van Vianen is a 1614 silver-gilt covered ewer in the Rijksmuseum, commissioned by the Amsterdam goldsmiths' guild to commemorate the death of Adam's brother Paulus van Vianen. It is an iconic symbol of the auricular style developed by the two brothers. Parts of the decoration form definite forms, the ewer rests on a crouching monkey, and the handle begins as the hair of a woman bent forward. But the woman's legs slide away under the swirling forms of the top of the cover, and the handle terminates as a protuberance from the nose of a monster.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Memorial Guild Cup (Adam van Vianen)
xsd:integer
54469314
xsd:integer
1027626781
rdf:langString
other_title_1
rdf:langString
Memorial Guild Cup
rdf:langString
The Memorial Guild Cup by Adam van Vianen is a 1614 silver-gilt covered ewer in the Rijksmuseum, commissioned by the Amsterdam goldsmiths' guild to commemorate the death of Adam's brother Paulus van Vianen. It is an iconic symbol of the auricular style developed by the two brothers. It has been described as "a strikingly original work that is largely abstract and completely sculptural in its conception", and quickly became famous, appearing in several Dutch Golden Age paintings, both still lifes and history paintings, "no doubt in part because its bizarre form allowed it to pass as an object from an ancient and foreign land", and so useful for Old Testament scenes and the like. It is unknown why the Amsterdam guild commissioned the ewer, as neither brother lived in Amsterdam or was a member of the guild. A number of leading examples are shown below. According to James Trilling, it "is one of the very few ornamental works that deserve recognition as art-historical turning points. Van Vianen's breakthrough was the introduction of inchoate or indeterminate form, which paved the way for both Rococo and modernist ornament." It was raised by a lengthy process of chasing from a single sheet of silver, and chasing was the main technique used in auricular silver. Parts of the decoration form definite forms, the ewer rests on a crouching monkey, and the handle begins as the hair of a woman bent forward. But the woman's legs slide away under the swirling forms of the top of the cover, and the handle terminates as a protuberance from the nose of a monster. In the same year van Vianen made a ewer and basin for the City Corporation of Amsterdam in a far more conventional style, though with elements of auricular decoration. These are also in the Rijksmuseum.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
6560