Homes Antiques

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
In 1935 florist Constance Spry
(1886–1960) was fast becoming a
famous taste-maker. Her first book
Flower Decoration (1934) was a
huge success and her asymmetrical
floral arrangements that broke with
convention were all the rage.
‘Constance Spry loved creating
unusual free-form displays with berries
and kale leaves as well as flowers’
reveals John Mackie one of the
founding directors of Lyon & Turnbull
auction house in Edinburgh. ‘She
couldn’t find the right vases to suit her
creations so she commissioned a range
at Fulham Pottery.’
One of Spry’s employees Florence
Standfast designed a 1935 Constance
Spry collection of elegant twin-
handled ‘mantle’ vases inspired partly
by ancient Greek and Egyptian forms
(see facing page).
‘Spry wanted simple plaster-
eect vases that were sculptural and
classical – with a matt exterior and a
glazed interior’ explains Mackie. ‘The
neo-baroque decorative plasterwork of
Serge Roche influenced her too.’
Large rarely seen designs from
the range can fetch up to £2000 but
smaller more common examples are
much more aordable and often go for
just £80–£100 at auction. ‘Of course
they look stunning filled with flowers
but they’re beautiful unadorned
too just as a sculptural object on a
mantelpiece’ says Mackie.
In 1937 Fulham Pottery launched
a similar line of vases called ‘Alber’
which was cheaper and more widely
available than the Constance Spry
range. There followed many later
Constance Spry-style vases by other
makers so ensure you’re buying the
real thing not a repro. Q

CONSTANCE


‘In India there is a tradition of chewing SPRY VASES
betel nuts and so there were lots of
ornate metal spittoons (in silver or brass)
produced; small ones for tabletops
and larger ones that would be placed
on the floor. The large ones are lovely
used as vases for bigger blooms such as
hydrangeas or lilies.’
Backman has a large Mogul floor-
standing spittoon made of high-grade
silver in stock at the moment that is for
sale at £8000.
‘It might have come from a sultan’s
palace’ he says. ‘It’s very fine.’
Similarly the highly decorative metal
bases of hookah pipes used for smoking
tobacco are often sold and used as vases
today. ‘They can be made of gold silver
or bidri (a blackened alloy of zinc and
copper inlaid with thin sheets of pure
silver)’ says Michael. Some of the most
interesting hookah base vessels have blue
and white ceramic bodies with a silver
upper section which were manufactured
in China for the Indian market.

Many metal vessels were
manufactured in Kashmir which has a
great deal of Persian influence and is a
region that exported a lot of metalware
to the UK for retailers such as Liberty &
Co. Bidri items were often made in Bidar
while Mogul pieces were made in the
north around Delhi. Cheaper engraved
brass vessels which were produced in
almost industrial quantities tend to be
from Moradabad.
‘Prices for these simple brass vessels
start at around £100 but the most
stunning metal containers from a palace
adorned with semi-precious stones can
fetch as much as £750000’ reveals
Backman.
The cheapest metal Indian ‘vases’
available today are hand-beaten spherical
‘matki’ pots that were originally used
as water carriers with rivet detailing.
Today they’re around £75 each but many
are no longer watertight so if you want
to use them as a vase you might need to
place a small jam jar inside.

THE RISE OF THE ‘VASE’...


The first pictures in Britain of vases as we know them today can be seen on
18th-century engraved trade cards but the word ‘vase’ wasn’t used until later
in the 19th century. ‘They were called ‘flower glasses’ in the 18th century and
they were fairly rare’ reveals glass specialist Andy McConnell. ‘They are non-
essential luxurious items. If you’re oered the choice between a drinking glass
or a vase and you’re poor the vase is fairly far down the list.’
As well as ‘flower glasses’ the Victorians gave them other names. ‘Even now
dealers often place the word ‘celery’ in front of the word ‘vase’ when they are
selling a Victorian vessel’ McConnell tells us. ‘I’m sure you can put celery in
them and some of them were indeed intended for celery but it seems to me as if
the Victorians must have lived on the stu! I don’t know where they put their
flowers...’ he chuckles.
In the late 19th century vases came into their own as people became
gradually wealthier and leisure gardening became a popular pastime. Vases rose
up the scale and they were made in increasingly large numbers.

In India flowers were used as offerings at altars and statues


but they were changed every day so there was no


need to preserve them in water



  • Michael Backman specialist in Asian decorative arts


46 H&A SUMMER 2017

Free download pdf