Object of the Week: A pair of Victorian carving knives with handles modelled as Shakespeare and Lord Byron
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
Quality cutlery designs for the Victorians, who would eat with the help of carvings of William Shakespeare and Lord Byron
Joseph Rodgers & Sons, cutlers to Her Majesty, made these knives with famous figureheads© Sworders Sometime in the 1950s, Bill Brown spent 10 shillings on his first purchase – a knife and fork from a Dutch travelling set. Since then, the collector has built an incredible haul of cutlery across history, including an ivory pair of Victorian carvers, modelled with the busts of William Shakespeare and, on a two-pronged carving fork handle, the bust of Lord Byron.
The knives will be sold at auction for £300-£400 A former graphic designer, Brown favoured aesthetics over history, trawling the Victoria and Albert Museum and the continent, where one of his favourite pieces – a child’s plastic spoon with a train design aimed at encouraging them to open their mouths upon hearing the words “choo choo” – remains.
Museums Sheffield bought 1,000 pieces from the Bill Brown Collection with the help of a £485,000 grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund and the Art Fund in 2003. “I could see trends which were not apparent before, such as the way the shape of the blade evolved and the changes in constructional technique,” Brown wrote in his book, British Cutlery – An Illustrated History of Design, Evolution and Use.
Images: sworder.co.ukWhat do you think? Leave a comment below.More from Culture24's Object of the WeekA bust based on a cast of Isaac Newton's face made at his deathA colossal Chinese Buddha statue at the British MuseumA pistol owned by Winston Churchill during World War Two
Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history-and-heritage/art554344-william-shakespeare-lord-byron-cutlery-object