Barber Basin
Dateca. 1730
MediumTin-glazed earthenware (delft)
DimensionsH: 4 3/16"; D: 10 3/8"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1958-504
DescriptionSteep-sided bowl with wide flaring rim and low foot ring is covered with a white tin-enamel ground. The rim has an arc cut out for the neck, depression for a soap ball, and is decorated in two shades of blue with a geometric pattern projecting inward from the outside edge. The interior of the bowl, also in two blues, is decorated with barber's implements: Comb, scissors, razor, two shaving brushes, and two soap balls.Label TextBarbers' bowls have a cutout on the rim to cup around a man's neck (or against his chest, as some contemporary illustrations show). The depression presumably was used as a soap receptacle or a thumb rest. Most surviving examples include barber's tools among their decoration and sometimes surgeon's tools even though the two professions had been separated before these were made. Dated examples range from 1681 to 1763 with no basic change in form. A basin in the Bristol Museum has related rim decoration and the same selection of instruments.
InscribedNo
MarkingsNo
ProvenanceA. & K. Embden, London
ca. 1760
ca. 1740
ca. 1710
ca. 1750
February 12, 1775
Ca. 1760
1780-1800
1850-1910
ca. 1815
1725-1775
1650-1675