Looking Glass
Dateca. 1750
OriginEngland
MediumDeal, gesso, gilt, and glass
DimensionsOH: 85"; OW: 42"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1936-380,1
DescriptionCarved deal, gesso and gold gilt, griffin figures and elaborate scroll and leaf designsLabel TextObjects in the rococo taste often featured frothy confections of three-dimensional, naturalistic carving. The fashion was popularized by Thomas Chippendale, Thomas Johnson, and other English designers who published drawings for exuberantly and whimsically carved household furnishings. Some artisans followed them exactly and others used them as inspiration for their own creations. Gilt looking glasses were especially well suited for such work. The example seen here is one of a pair that once hung in a large English country house.
Expansive sheets of plate glass were costly and often broke during production. Complex frames like this one allowed the maker to extend the expanse of glass by incorporating smaller pieces into a complex frame.
ProvenanceFormerly at Milton Abbey, Dorset, England
Exhibition(s)
1710-1720
1730-1750
ca. 1725
1740-1760
ca. 1740
Ca. 1735
1720-1740
Ca. 1735
ca. 1793
1725-1750
1650-1675
1725-1740