Wine cistern
On View In:
Gallery 350
Artist:   Paul de Lamerie  
Title:   Wine cistern  
Date:   1719-1720  
Medium:   Silver  
Dimensions:   18 x 38 x 25 in. (45.72 x 96.52 x 63.5 cm)  
Credit Line:   The James S. Bell Memorial Fund  
Location:   Gallery 350  

Paul de Lamerie registered his first mark in 1712, only seven years before the creation of this masterpiece. This is the earliest known example of his highly decorative style, showing exceptional imagination and unexpected power in both form and ornament. Similar pieces in the French taste had been made by other goldsmiths before him, but at the time de Lamerie created this cistern, work of this importance and scale was virtually unknown.

Bold, faun-like masks spring from the body to support the vigorous leaf rim. Moulded panels on a Régence scale-pattern ground enclose grotesque marks, and scrolls and shells are chased on the base. The superbly proportioned vessel is given power and individuality by two eccentrically-shaped handles bearing animals' masks on the upper volutes. The sum of the parts demonstrates Paul de Lamerie's ability to produce, even in the early years of his career, a massive piece of highest quality. During large banquets and parties, cisterns were used to chill wine bottles in cool water. This cistern was made for John Leveson-Gower, 1st Earl Gower, in 1719. His grandson, George Granville (1758-1833), was made 1st Duke of Sutherland in 1833. The cistern remained in the family from 1719 to 1961 when it was acquired by the Institute.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   de Lamerie, Paul  
Nationality:   English  
Life Dates:   English (born Holland), 1688-1751  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:   Mark; Engravings Inside the bowl are engraved the arms of John (1694-1754), first earl Gower and Mark The cistern bears full high standard hallmarks in six places on the wine cooler; on the unde  
Classification:   Metalwork  
Physical Description:   the oval bowl of the wine cooler rests on a similarly shaped foot comprised of a plain concave molding and a vertical base rim surmounted by a convex repoussé band; rim and bowl are linked in the center of either lone side of the oval bowl by a large cash male head surrounded by exhuborant scrolls and moldings Weight: 703 troy ounces = 48 lbs. and 3.29 oz.  
Creation Place:   Europe, England, , ,  
Accession #:   61.56  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts