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Masterpieces : Scrimshaw ivory
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Scrimshaw ivory - KG.22
Origin: New England
Circa: 1800
BC
to 1900
AD
Dimensions:
6.75" (17.1cm) high
x 2.5" (6.4cm) wide
Condition: Very Fine
Additional Information: F.
£9,000.00
Location: Great Britain
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Photo Gallery |
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Description |
This is a unique and refined
Scrimshaw. Scrimshaw is the
name given to scrollwork,
engravings, and carvings done in
bone or ivory. Typically it refers to
the handiwork created by whalers
made from the byproducts of
harvesting marine mammals. It is
most commonly made out of the
bones and teeth of sperm whales,
the baleen of other whales, and
the tusks of walruses. It takes the
form of elaborate engravings in the
form of pictures and lettering on
the surface of the bone or tooth,
with the engraving highlighted
using a pigment, or, less often,
small sculptures made from the
same material. However the latter
really fall into the categories of
ivory carving, for all carved teeth
and tusks, or bone carving. The
making of scrimshaw began on
whaling ships between 1745 to
1759 on the Pacific Ocean, and
survived until the ban on
commercial whaling. The practice
survives as a hobby and as a trade
for commercial artisans.
On one of the two sides of the
scrimshaw a naked feminine
figure has been engraved, depicted
in a highly intimate scene,
appropriately labelled "moment of
privacy".
The scene is enclosed by an oval-
shaped frame that increases the
feeling of voyeurism to the scene.
The realism and the volumetry of
the draperies is rendered with
remarkable mastery.
- (KG.22)
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