Thursday, March 29, 2012

The Home Beautiful: The Deroche Spill Vase, 1830



The V&A
Spill Vase
Deroche, 1830
The Victoria & Albert Museum


We all know what a spill vase is.  Well, just in case you don’t—spills were long curls or sticks of rolled paper which were used to transfer fire from the hearth to a lamp or candle, or used to help light the fire in the grate.  These were kept in “spill vases” on or near a mantelpiece.  Very often, these spill vases were figural, or, in this case, highly decorative.

This spill vase was made, in 1830, in the Gothic revival style-- one of the most enduring and widespread architectural and design movements of the Nineteenth Century.  It’s the work of the Deroche Firm about whom we know very little except that it mainly operated as a decorating studio and producer of wares in a vast variety of styles.

The vase of porcelain boasts molded decoration in the form of gothic tracery against a deep green background.  Gilt on the arches, base and rim add dimension and shimmer which would have looked quite handsome on a mantelpiece.  



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