scent bottle
Object NameCameo Scent Bottle with Flowers
Manufacturer
Thomas Webb and Sons
(f. 1837)
Manufacturer(silver)
Arthur Willmore Pennington
Made FromGlass, Silver
Dateabout 1880-1900; 1886 (silver)
Place MadeEngland, Amblecote
TechniqueCased, blown, carved, assembled
SizeOverall H: 9.1 cm, W: 3.9 cm, D: 2.9 cm
Accession Number2016.2.9
Credit LineGift of the Ennion Society
Curatorial Area(s)
On ViewEuropean Gallery
Physical DescriptionCameo Scent Bottle with Flowers. Transparent green, transparent brown, and white glasses, silver; cased, blown, carved, assembled. Flattened teardrop-shaped white, layered over translucent green, layered over transparent brown glass scent bottle (green layer visible at narrowed base and inside rim). Bottle decorated with twining five-petaled flowers and foliage. Silver neck fixed to top of bottle; undecorated globular cap hinged to neck.Provenance
Source
Susan Kaplan Jacobson
- 2016-09-09
Susie Kaplan Jacobson’s collection of cameo bottles began around the age of 10. From her art-dealer parents and other family friends, she received small bottles as presents for her birthday, Hanukkah, and other celebratory occasions during the 1960s and 70s. 2016.2.5, the small round white-on-red bottle, was the first. While Kaplan Jacobson is not certain of the provenance of every bottle, she recalls that one of the Barbe bottles (2016.2.7 or 2016.2.8) came from Ray Grover in Florida, and 2016.2.10 was purchased from an unknown dealer at the New Haven Antiques Show. Searches for “cameo”, “Webb,” and “Woodall” in the Getty Provenance Index databases and on the Database of Art Objects at the Jeu de Paume by the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg yielded no matching or likely objects with problematic Nazi-era histories.
Susie Kaplan Jacobson’s collection of cameo bottles began around the age of 10. From her art-dealer parents and other family friends, she received small bottles as presents for her birthday, Hanukkah, and other celebratory occasions during the 1960s and 70s. 2016.2.5, the small round white-on-red bottle, was the first. While Kaplan Jacobson is not certain of the provenance of every bottle, she recalls that one of the Barbe bottles (2016.2.7 or 2016.2.8) came from Ray Grover in Florida, and 2016.2.10 was purchased from an unknown dealer at the New Haven Antiques Show. Searches for “cameo”, “Webb,” and “Woodall” in the Getty Provenance Index databases and on the Database of Art Objects at the Jeu de Paume by the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg yielded no matching or likely objects with problematic Nazi-era histories.
probably 1701-1800
50 BCE-25 CE
about 1880-1920
800-999