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Vienna circa 1780: an imperial silver service rediscovered
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Abstract
"Eighteenth-century European court society was defined by its lavish banquets featuring complex settings and protocols designed to indicate the status of both hosts and guests. Integral to these events were extravagant dining services of silver and gold, many of which were subsequently melted down to suit changing fashions or to replenish depleted treasuries. Vienna Circa 1780: An Imperial Silver Service Rediscovered presents a rare surviving ensemble that exemplifies princely dining at its most splendid." "The service was made in Vienna from about 1779 to 1782 by Austrian master goldsmith Ignaz Joseph Wurth for members of the Imperial Habsburg family, Duke Albert Casimir of Sachsen-Teschen and his consort, Archduchess Marie Christine of Austria. The so-called Second Sachsen-Teschen Service originally comprised hundreds of items, including wine coolers, tureens, dishes with cloches, saltcellars, candelabra, candlesticks, and serving implements, as well as more than twenty-four dozen silver plates and porcelain-mounted silver and gilded-silver flatware. Albert and Marie Christine displayed these magnificent pieces proudly in banquets they hosted as joint governors of the Austrian Netherlands from 1781 to 1793." "Last seen by the public at the beginning of the twentieth century and once believed lost, the ensemble has been partially reunited in this book---and the exhibition it accompanies---and placed in the context of contemporary silver work from other European cities. In the process, Wolfram Koeppe surveys the heady atmosphere during what has been called the Golden Age of Ceremony and traces dining etiquette during its transition from the elaborate parade buffets that incorporated ostentatious displays of silver treasures to the slightly less-cumbersome service a la francaise, which allowed for all dishes in a particular course to be placed on the table at once. Hosting an appropriately grand and socially correct banquet further entailed carefully conceived seating plans and napkins folded in elaborate shapes intended to reflect the relative hierarchy of the guests." "The author also traces Vienna's rise as a cultural center in the late eighteenth century, an accomplishment in which the Wurth dynasty of goldsmiths figured prominently, and he compares that family's achievements with those of other European masters, including the famous Germains of Paris and Luigi Valadier of Rome. In addressing each element of the service itself, Dr. Koeppe explores the ways in which Wurth drew from a variety of influences to create a decorative style uniquely his own. The result demonstrates how Wurth melded the reigning French Neoclassical style with purely Viennese elements---such as a vigorous design, a sparkling play of textures, and the juxtaposition of classical elements with whimsical sculptural details---and established Vienna as a major center of the Neoclassical goldsmith's art." "Wolfram Koeppe is Curator, Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum of Art."--BOOK JACKET.
Contents
Director's Foreword / Thomas P. Campbell -- Imperial Aspirations and the Golden Age of Ceremony -- From the Credenze zur Parade to the Service a la francaise: The Silver Service in Europe during the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century -- Amor Vincit Omnia (Love Conquers All) -- The Germains of Vienna: The Wurth Dynasty of Goldsmiths -- The Rise of Vienna as a Cultural Center -- Establishing a Viennese School of Decorative Arts -- The Goldsmith as Sculptor in Bronze -- The Development of Viennese Neoclassicism -- The Second Sachsen-Teschen Service Rediscovered -- Large Tureens -- Sauce Tureens -- Dishes with Cloches -- Ewers -- Salts -- Candlesticks and Candelabra -- Wine Coolers -- Serving Dishes and Dinner Plates -- Flatware and Serving Pieces -- The Fate of the Second Sachsen-Teschen Service -- The Silver Service in Brussels -- Epilogue: Founding a Cultural Legacy.
Contributors
Publisher
Publication
- New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art
- New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press, c2010
Is about
Person
Subject
Period
1780
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 9781588393685
- 1588393682
- 9780300155181
- 0300155182
Annotations / title notes
Notes
"This catalogue is published in conjunction with the exhibition 'Vienna Circa 1780: An Imperial Silver Service Rediscovered', on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, April 13-November 7, 2010. A second exhibition, based on the Museum's concept, is scheduled to be on view at the Liechtenstein Museum, Vienna, December 2, 2010-April 26, 2011." -- T.p. verso.
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