Antique Early 18th Century Mirror

Early XVIII Century mirrors

At the end of the 17th century, a mirror about 1m x 90cm (40in x 36in) would have cost the equivalent of 20,000 in today’s currency. The earliest mirrors were handheld, but by the 18th century, the mirror had become an essential part of the fashionable home.
ENGLISH GILDED EASEL MIRROR
This mirror was designed to be placed on a table. Mirror backs were often covered with softwood, to protect the glass and metal from being oxidised by the light. c.1725.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF MIRROR IN EUROPE
Mirrors have been used for thousands of years. They were believed to foretell the future and to bring bad luck, especially when broken. Many people thought that to see your reflection was to see your soul, and for years the Church was against the use of mirrors.
The earliest known mirror was made of bronze, and ancient civilizations also used silver, gold, tin, steel, obsidian (volcanic glass), and rock crystal. Curved glass mirrors, made by cutting a sphere in two, were produced during the Middle Ages, but it was not until the 15th century that it was possible to create flat, colourless glass, known as “crystallo”. This technique created relatively small pieces of glass.
VENETIAN GLASSMAKERS MAKING MIRRORS
Crystallo, or crystalline glass, and blown glass were developed in Venice. The Venetian workshops were the only places producing glass mirrors before the mid 17th century The commercial importance of this discovery prompted the Venetian authorities to forbid glassmakers to move from their headquarters on the island of Murano on pain of death.
Foliage motifs
DEVELOPMENTS OF MIRRORS IN EUROPE
Although some Venetian glassmakers were seduced into setting up workshops, principally in Germany and the Low Countries, it was not until around 1663 that Murano’s supremacy was challenged. Louis XIV of France established a glassworks at Tourlaville, while in England, a glassworks was set up at Vauxhall to produce mirrors for the court of Charles II.
At the end of the 17th century, Bernard Perrot, working at Tourlaville, developed the casting method, which made it possible to create larger sheets of glass.
The glass was translucent but not transparent, as minerals in the sand affected the result. Artisans cut, ground, engraved, polished, and silvered the glass, using mercury to produce a reflective surface. In 1835, real silver was used for the first time, relieving the makers of the hazards of mercury poisoning.
Female masks
Marble fire surround
GEORGE II CHIMNEY PIECE MIRROR
This giltwood mirror, attributed to Matthias Lock, has
an elaborately carved frame with Rococo details of fruit,
leaves, birds, scrolls, and Chinoiserie elements. c 1755.
CHANGING FASHIONS
The production of larger sheets of glass enabled mirrors to become the focal point of the room, and to reflect light around what were previously very dark homes. The Salle des Glaces at the Palace of Versailles (see p.34) must have made a powerful
impact on those who had never seen anything other than a small hand mirror.
In England, 1700-40 marked a golden age of mirror production while the 20 per cent tax on mirrors was temporarily abolished. Large mirrors were designed to be placed over the mantelpiece, and long pier glasses were made, often in pairs, to fit between windows in grand houses. Fashionable country homes were furnished with fine mirrors. In 1703, John Gumley produced 3m-high (10ft) mirrors decorated with blue glass for Chatsworth.
From about 1725, English design was inspired by Palladian architecture (see p.96), often mirroring architectural details of the house in the frame. Oval mirrors were also very popular.
FRAME DESIGN
Due to their size and the versatility of frame carving, mirrors were among the first household objects to reflect fashion. At the turn of the 18th century, lacquer panels or japanning were sought after. Later, fashion favoured elaborately carved Rococo frames, including asymmetrical mirrors with Chinoiserie, C-scrolls, and foliage.
KEY DATES
20th century BC: Hand-held polished bronze mirror. 6th century: Etruscan hand mirror.
1291: Venetian Republic requires glassworkers to move to the island of Murano.
1448: Term “crystalline glass” appears in the inventory of Rene d’Anjou.
1571-92: Venetian craftsman, Jacopo Verzelini, sets up glassworks in the City of London.
1612: L’Arte Vietraria, by Antonio Neri, about the processes of glassmaking, published in Florence.
1618: Sir Robert Mansell obtains patent to set up a London glasshouse employing Venetian glassmakers.
1665: Nicholas du Noyer sets up a glass house employing 200 workers in Paris.
C.1670: Bernard Perrot invents casting technique, making it possible to create larger sheets of glass.
1676: George Ravenscroft invents lead crystal glass by adding lead oxide to glass.
1678: Patent granted to John Roberts’ “invention of grinding, polishing and diamonding glass plates for looking glasses… by the motion of water and wheels.”
1719: Real Fabrica de Coina, probably Portugal’s first mirror factory, established by John Beare.
MIRROR BOX
This stunning box mirror has a number of
architectural elements, including the broken
pediment and the two marble columns flanking
the mirror plate. The piece is inlaid with
precious stones. This mirror was once owned
by Marie de Medici.
CARVED, GILDED GIRANDOLE
This is one of a pair of fine giltwood girandoles after a design by Thomas Johnson, published in 1758. The gilding and candles helped to reflect more light around a room. c,1760.
VENETIAN OVAL MIRROR
This oval-shaped glass is typical of Italian design and uses etched and applied glass to frame the central oval mirror. Its Venetian origin would have made it highly covetable. Whole teams of artisans were needed to create mirrors like this.

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