Toilet Service: Salver (Feast of the Gods)
Attributedattributed to
George Bowers
(British, active 1660-1689)
ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Dateca. 1670-1680
Mediumsilver and silver-gilt
Dimensionsdiameter: 9 1/4 in. (23.5 cm.)
height: 2 1/4 in. (5.7 cm.)
DescriptionOne of two salvers of a ten piece, unmarked toilet service. The service includes two salvers, two rectangular boxes with hinged lids and locks, two square boxes with loose covers, two smaller square boxes with loose covers, and two powder boxes with double screw-on covers.
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. Munro Collection
Label TextThis silver toilet service once graced the dressing table of a lady. Elaborate sets like this served as symbols of wealth. The various caskets and boxes held combs, powders, and other types of cosmetics. The large salvers and rectangular boxes show scenes from the legend of Troy, an appropriate allusion for the decoration of items designed to enhance a woman's beauty. As she sat at her dressing table and applied her makeup, the lady might have paused to contemplate the tragic results of the Judgement of Paris, whose desire for a beautiful woman incited the ten-year Trojan War.Status
On viewObject number77.19.2
George Bowers
ca. 1670-1680
Object number: 77.19.4
George Bowers
ca. 1670-1680
Object number: 77.19.3
William Blake
ca. 1814-1816
Object number: 000.17