9465

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    Mughal Zinc Cooling Flask with Silver Mounts & Fabric Covering

    Northern India
    18th century

    height: 25cm, width: approximately 14cm, weight: 795g

    Available Enquire

    Provenance

    UK art market

    This flask or bottle comprises a bulbous base typically hammered and raised from plain zinc sheet, and a neck and stopper of high-grade solid silver. The neck is plain other than borders of beading.

    The stopper is mounted with a flower-like finial to which an original, heavy chain is attached and which connects to the neck.

    The base is covered completely in a cream-coloured muslin that has been carefully gathered and pleated around the base.

    Flasks such as this example were used to cool liquids – water or perhaps wine. The cloth on the base would be soaked with a water and saltpetre solution to chill the contents.

    An example of a similar style cooling bottle is illustrated in Terlinden (1987, p. 114.) An Ottoman example comprises lot 126 in Christie’s London, ‘Islamic Art and Manuscripts’, October 12, 2004.

    Zinc as a metal, was prized throughout the Islamic world in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. By the second half of the seventeenth century metalworkers had discovered that zinc was quite malleable at only a little above the boiling point of water so making vessels from sheet zinc became more widespread.

    A similar example that was first mentioned in the inventory of the Royal Danish Kunstkammer in 1741 and is now in the National Museum of Denmark is illustrated in Dam-Mikkelsen & Lundbaek, 1980, p. 102. Another is in the Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, Russia.

    The example here is in fine condition.

     

    Above: An example in the Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, Russia. This example no longer has its fabric covering thereby revealing its zinc base.

    References

    Christie’s London, ‘Islamic Art and Manuscripts’, October 12, 2004, lot 126.

    Dam-Mikkelsen, B., & T. Lundbaek (eds.), Ethnographic Objects in the Royal Danish Kunstkammer 1650-1800, Nationalmuseet, 1980.

    Terlinden, C., Mughal Silver Magnificence: 16th-19th Centuries, Antalga, 1987.

    Zebrowski, M., Gold, Silver & Bronze from Mughal India, Alexandria Press, 1997.

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