
Property from the Collection of Richard Kent
Lot Closed
October 18, 08:05 PM GMT
Estimate
9,000 - 12,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
A Rare Victorian Silver-Mounted Glass "Cockatoo" Claret Jug, Alexander Crichton, London, 1882
the plain glass body with incised lines suggesting the wings, plain glass scroll handle, on silver base chased with feathers and claws, similarly chased silver neck with hinged head with glass eyes, the crest forming the thumbpiece, gilt interior, fully marked on neck, part marked on head and base
height 11 3/4 in.
29.8 cm
John B. Hawkins
Paul Hollis, Hancocks, London
Francis Raeymaekers
John B. Hawkins, "Alexander Crichton - Through the Drinking Glass", no. 22
The design for this "cockatoo" jug (with the crest down) was registered by Crichton & Curry on December 19, 1882, no. 391662. This was when Alexander Crichton and his partner were again registering their own jugs, after their retail partner Henry Lewis had been registering the designs earlier in the year. However, John B. Hawkins documents at least two examples of "crest down" cockatoo jugs dated 1881, suggesting they may have put the design into production a year earlier in 1881, and only registered it at the end of 1882.
Alexander Crichton
The Father of figural claret jugs is Alexander Crichton, who almost single-handedly launched the craze in the early 1880s. John Culme has found a first mention of Crichton in 1870, when he entered an embossed up into the Society of Arts Exhibition, an early testament to his skills. He entered marks by himself in 1872 and 1875, and an early production was retailed by Hamilton, Crichton & Co. of Edinburg, suggesting a possible family connection. A pair of silver-gilt shields of 1878 depicted “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, after designs by Sir Noel Paton, showing his engagement with the fantastic.
In 1880 he went into partnership with Charles John Curry, who hailed from a family of silversmiths and spent seven years apprenticeship as a modeler and chaser with Edward Barnard & Sons. Describing themselves as designers, modelers, and silversmiths, they are recorded as “Crichton & Curry”, 45 Rathbone Place, off Oxford Street, on October 14. 1880. Less than a year later registered their first figural design, an owl-form jug, on August 16, 1881. This was followed in quick succession by the Walrus on September 22, the Duck and the Drake on October 1, and the Parrot on December 3, all of 1881.
Several of the figural claret jugs of the following year, 1882, bear Crichton’s maker’s mark but the retailers mark of Henry Lewis, of 172 New Bond Street. The new registered designs of 1882 were done in Lewis’ name as well, the Dodo of February 1, the Carp of February 18, and the Otter of March 7th, but the known examples all have the maker’s mark of Alexander Crichton.
Crichton & Curry would register two more designs for figural jugs, the Penguin of April 26, 1882, and the Cockatoo of December 19; perhaps this change represents a falling out with Henry Lewis. However, losing their primary wholesale purchaser would have been risky in the depressed economy of the early 1880s, and by 1882 other firms had jumped onto the bandwagon of figural jugs, causing competition in the novelty market. Crichton would create a bear-form honeypot to the designs of sculptor Sir Joseph Boehm in 1883, to be given as a gift to the Royal Academy, but the partnership was dissolved by October 1884, and Crichton declared bankruptcy in December 1886, with debts of £1,846. However short-lived his business, Alexander Crichton left a legacy of creativity and craftsmanship that has far outlived him.
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