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(c) 2016 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Covered Cup and Saucer
(c) 2016 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
(c) 2016 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston

Covered Cup and Saucer

Date19th century
Place MadeRajasthan, India, South Asia
MediumLapis lazuli set with rubies, diamonds, and pearls in gold
Dimensions10.8 cm (4 1/4 in.) saucer diameter
ClassificationsVessels
Credit LineIsabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Accession numberS18s22.a-c
Status
Not on view
Web CommentaryIn the late nineteenth century, British authorities in India attempted to “improve and advance” local arts by introducing new materials and experimental techniques. At the Mughal court, lapis lazuli had been used for inlay rather than as a material for large pieces. In contrast to jade – the favorite Mughal hard stone – the structure of lapis does not allow the carving of the thin and translucent surfaces so widely admired by the Mughals. This explains the thick and rather heavy form of the cup and saucer, acquired from [A.M.] Jacob in Calcutta.While rubies and diamonds were the standard gems employed in the decoration of jeweled Indian objects, pearls are rarely seen. There are technical reasons for this, because in India gemstones are normally set in the kundan technique, which requires heating. This would damage the fragile surface of organic pearls. Here, they appear to have been set with an adhesive, which probably caused the dark stains on the adjacent gold. Even the 22-carat gold normally used by Indian jewelers contains copper and other base metals, which may have reacted with the adhesive.The lotus leaves carved on the outside of the saucer, at the base of the cup, and below the cover’s finial follow Mughal models, although their lack of vitality indicates a later date of manufacture. It is therefore likely that the objects were made not long before Jacob sold them to Isabella and Jack Gardner in January 1884.Source: Pedro Moura Carvalho, “Jewelry and Objects from India,” in Journeys East: Isabella Stewart Gardner and Asia, edited by Alan Chong and Noriko Murai (Boston: ISGM and Gutenberg Periscope, 2009): 459-460.
Id727548
Last Updated8/14/24
EmbARK ObjectID15578
Source ID4121
(c) 2022 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
17th century
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Unknown
19th century
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16th century
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late 18th century
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Missiaglia 1846
19th century
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Unknown
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Unknown
mid 19th century - late 19th century
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Unknown
19th century
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Unknown
before 1924
(c) 2016 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
about 1715-1774