A SILVER-GILT MOUNTED NAUTILUS SHELL CUP
A SILVER-GILT MOUNTED NAUTILUS SHELL CUP
A SILVER-GILT MOUNTED NAUTILUS SHELL CUP
A SILVER-GILT MOUNTED NAUTILUS SHELL CUP
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A SILVER-GILT MOUNTED NAUTILUS SHELL CUP

POSSIBLY SCOTTISH, PROBABLY EARLY 17TH CENTURY

Details
A SILVER-GILT MOUNTED NAUTILUS SHELL CUP
POSSIBLY SCOTTISH, PROBABLY EARLY 17TH CENTURY
On domed circular base supported on a band of openwork pales, chased above with tongues enclosing alternating stars and crescents, chased above with a band of cresting sea monsters amid waves; the tapering stem engraved with narrow chevrons between plain flat flanges, surmounted by a plain section with central disc flange buttressed by three openwork beaded scrolls supporting the shell, the upper part applied with a plain band engraved with rosettes and leaves within interlacing, with three caryatid-form straps, the valve applied with a further strap headed by an applied cherub head, engraved below, in the interior of the shell, with a coat-of-arms, flanked by two applied rosettes, stem with trace of a mark
10 3⁄8 in. (25.7 cm.) high
Provenance
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 30 November 1967, lot 143.
Acquired from Spink & Son Ltd., London, 16 June 1969.

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Lot Essay

Recent spectrographic analysis of these silver mounts indicates the metal alloy is consistent with that of works dating to the early 17th century. At 893⁄1000, the standard of the present cup is closer to that of the Continental standard of 900⁄1000 than the English standard of 925⁄1000. The Scottish standard in the early 17th century was closer to 917⁄1000, below that used in England. A possible Scottish attribution likely stems from around the time the cup was sold at Sotheby’s, London, 30 November 1967, lot 143, where it was noted that the coat-of-arms, although unidentified, 'have a distinctly Scottish flavour.' Another Scottish nautilus cup dating to 1611-16, known as the Heriot Cup, features an openwork stem and similarly lacks any lip mounts or applied figures (see I. Findlay, Scottish Gold and Silver Work, London, 1956, pl. 32).

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