A POLISH PARCEL-GILT SILVER TANKARD
A POLISH PARCEL-GILT SILVER TANKARD

MARK OF HIERONYMUS HOLL II, DANZIG, 1689-1699

Details
A POLISH PARCEL-GILT SILVER TANKARD
MARK OF HIERONYMUS HOLL II, DANZIG, 1689-1699
Cylindrical on domed foot, the body chased and engraved with lovers in landscape, with harp-shaped handle and hinged domed cover with bifurcated scroll thumbpiece, and seated deer finial, marked on foot and cover
9 in. (23 cm.) high
28 oz. 10 dwt. (888 gr.)
Provenance
Arne Bruun Rasmussen, Copenhagen 2010,
With Stahl, Hamburg, 2013.
Literature
A. Frąckowska, Gdańsk Silver Tankards of the 17th and the 18th Centuries, Warsaw, 2013, no. XXX/10, p. 379.

Brought to you by

Giles Forster
Giles Forster

Lot Essay


Hieronymus Holl, who is often confused with the silversmith Hans Ophagen, was a prolific maker of tankards many decorated with mythological and religious themes. He also depicted tankards decorated with a 'social scene in the garden' as described by Frąckowska in Gdańsk Silver Tankards of the 17th and the 18th centuries. This genre scene was a favoured by Holl as well as Peter Röde II and Christian Pichgel I. These type of scenes were inspired by Dutch iconography of the early 17th century. Although often regarded as allegories of virtues, in this instance they epitomise a more modern and liberated version without moralising undertones and completed by the deer shaped finial, a symbol of love.

More from The Collector: Silver and 19th Century Furniture, Sculpture, Ceramics & Works of Art

View All
View All