Description

Book Synopsis

This book reveals a great untold story of enterprise and innovation based on the relationship between the Victoria and Albert Museum, and Elkington & Co., the renowned industrial art and design manufacturer of the 19th-century. The Birmingham-based company pioneered and patented the industrial art of electro-metallurgy to create original artworks, perfect replicas, and mass-reproduced luxury consumer goods that used electricity to ‘grow’ metal into shape at a molecular level. This technological revolution created a profound legacy, which continues to influence the way modern material culture looks and operates today.

Elkington’s syntheses of science and art into industrial manufacturing processes revolutionized the design and production, replication and reproduction of precious metalwork, metal sculpture, and ornamental art metalwork. Elkington & Co. gained huge public acclaim at the Great Exhibition of 1851. They subsequently produced artworks and luxury goods, including world-renowned sports trophies like the Wimbledon Singles Trophies, as well as luxury dining services for great steamships and railways, including tableware that sank with the Titanic.

Elkington played a crucial role in shaping and building the V&A’s permanent collection from its foundation in 1852 (following the Great Exhibition) until the First World War. The V&A’s collections in turn had a profound influence on Elkington’s output. The great success of their relationship cemented both the museum’s status as a leading cultural institution, and the E&Co ‘makers-mark’ as one of the world’s first truly multinational designer brands. Elkington’s electrical alchemy helped spark the electrical revolution that founded the modern world.



Trade Review
‘This book has an engaging and carefully considered structure […] Packed with intriguing research, these richly documented essays widen the story across the industrial and art history of Victorian Britain.’ – Philippa Glanville, The Silver Society

Table of Contents
Director's Foreword; Series Editor's Foreword; Authors' Acknowledgements; Introduction: 'An Experimental Arrangement'; Key Terms; 1. An Early Electrotype Reproduction: The Bedford Tankard (1854); 2. Establishing a Luxury Designer Brand: The Electroplated Candlestick, Model No.2765 (1847); 3. Artistic Applications of the Electrotype: Eve's Hesitation (1851); 4. Unique Replicas: Electrotypes of the Temperantia Basin (1852-67); 5. A Global Artwork: The Milton Shield (1867-76); 6. Supplying 'The Art Wants of the World': Electrotypes of the Rosenborg Castle Lions (1885); 7. Diplomacy and Discovery in Russia: Electrotype of the Jerningham Wine Cooler (1884); 8. Expressions of Imperial Power: Electrotypes of the Perak Royal Regalia at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition (1886); Conclusion: The Present Time - Child and Heir of All the Past Times; Notes; Further Reading; Image Credits; Index

The Museum and the Factory: The V&A, Elkington

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    A Hardback by Alistair Grant, Angus Patterson

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      View other formats and editions of The Museum and the Factory: The V&A, Elkington by Alistair Grant

      Publisher: Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd
      Publication Date: 14/12/2018
      ISBN13: 9781848222915, 978-1848222915
      ISBN10: 1848222912

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book reveals a great untold story of enterprise and innovation based on the relationship between the Victoria and Albert Museum, and Elkington & Co., the renowned industrial art and design manufacturer of the 19th-century. The Birmingham-based company pioneered and patented the industrial art of electro-metallurgy to create original artworks, perfect replicas, and mass-reproduced luxury consumer goods that used electricity to ‘grow’ metal into shape at a molecular level. This technological revolution created a profound legacy, which continues to influence the way modern material culture looks and operates today.

      Elkington’s syntheses of science and art into industrial manufacturing processes revolutionized the design and production, replication and reproduction of precious metalwork, metal sculpture, and ornamental art metalwork. Elkington & Co. gained huge public acclaim at the Great Exhibition of 1851. They subsequently produced artworks and luxury goods, including world-renowned sports trophies like the Wimbledon Singles Trophies, as well as luxury dining services for great steamships and railways, including tableware that sank with the Titanic.

      Elkington played a crucial role in shaping and building the V&A’s permanent collection from its foundation in 1852 (following the Great Exhibition) until the First World War. The V&A’s collections in turn had a profound influence on Elkington’s output. The great success of their relationship cemented both the museum’s status as a leading cultural institution, and the E&Co ‘makers-mark’ as one of the world’s first truly multinational designer brands. Elkington’s electrical alchemy helped spark the electrical revolution that founded the modern world.



      Trade Review
      ‘This book has an engaging and carefully considered structure […] Packed with intriguing research, these richly documented essays widen the story across the industrial and art history of Victorian Britain.’ – Philippa Glanville, The Silver Society

      Table of Contents
      Director's Foreword; Series Editor's Foreword; Authors' Acknowledgements; Introduction: 'An Experimental Arrangement'; Key Terms; 1. An Early Electrotype Reproduction: The Bedford Tankard (1854); 2. Establishing a Luxury Designer Brand: The Electroplated Candlestick, Model No.2765 (1847); 3. Artistic Applications of the Electrotype: Eve's Hesitation (1851); 4. Unique Replicas: Electrotypes of the Temperantia Basin (1852-67); 5. A Global Artwork: The Milton Shield (1867-76); 6. Supplying 'The Art Wants of the World': Electrotypes of the Rosenborg Castle Lions (1885); 7. Diplomacy and Discovery in Russia: Electrotype of the Jerningham Wine Cooler (1884); 8. Expressions of Imperial Power: Electrotypes of the Perak Royal Regalia at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition (1886); Conclusion: The Present Time - Child and Heir of All the Past Times; Notes; Further Reading; Image Credits; Index

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