to the British Museum,
we made our way into the Waddesdon Bequest gallery, a collection of nearly 300 objects left to the Museum in 1898 by Baron Ferdinand Rothschild, the Waddesdon Bequest consists of exceptionally important and beautiful medieval and Renaissance pieces, as well as a number of 19th-century fakes. Together, they paint a fascinating picture of the development of the art market in the late 19th century,
so many beautiful objects to look at, like these the Ulm Book Covers,
everywhere we looked there were glittering jewels,
and the works of master craftsmen,
like this opal glass beaker, what gives the beaker its opal look is the fact that traces of arsenic are used in its manufacture, it was made on the estate of Count Buquay in the Czech Republic in about 1680,
like these, from left to right, The Adoration of the Magi, Three Cardinal Virtues, The Annunciation, none of these look as good in the photograph as they do when in the museum,
there are decorative plates, like this one depicting a vision of the future from the Book of Revelations from the Bible,
what makes some of these so unique is that even the backs of the dishes are decorated, like this one, painted copper on enamel, Limoges, made about 1580,
why? because we had visited the area where it was made in Venice, the island of Murano, way back in March 2018, this piece is called the Deblin cup, and was made in the period of 1450 -1500,
and this I recognised immediately, or at least a half of it, it is a half of a coco de mer, it was formed from half of a double coconut palm from the Seychelles, East Indian Ocean, ‘Sea nuts’ were brought to Europe by the Portuguese from the 1550s and were valued as antidotes to poison. They quickly found their way into court collections. The Rothschilds may have added the figure of Jupiter before 1866 to ‘improve’ the object for display, this object was collected by Anselm von Rothschild and bequeathed to the British Museum by Ferdinand Anselm Rothschild,
by Bombki, displaying items found both in London and the British Museum, made of painted glass they were designed in the UK and produced in Poland, yours for £55 per set,
Diana waited whilst I made a donation, there is no entrance fee to the museum, it is all free except some of the changing monthly exhibitions, you do not have to donate, but we did,
now this is more my kind of shop,
I decided on a glass of Moët,
as well as the cream tea,
our sandwiches, scones and cakes arrived,
sandwiches, scones, fresh cream, raspberry jam and what a appetizing selection of cakes,
and many thanks to this gentleman for changing our table,
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