Object Description
A rare early English silver basket of oval form with a fixed, caryatid handle and decorative cast silver rim and base. The quality of the cast ornament is exceptional and displays a marked rococo influence. The flat chased decoration to the centre encloses a large family coat of arms. Excellent weight and colour. At this time baskets were used mainly for bread and fruit.
Weight 1854g, 59.6 troy oz.
Height 14cm (with handle), 9.5cm (basket only). Top measures 31 x 33.5cm.
London 1737.
Maker Benjamin Godfrey.
Sterling silver.
This is a fantastic piece of silver and would make an ideal table centrepiece with fruit or flowers.
Marks. Stamped underneath with a full set of English silver hallmarks with minimal signs of wear.
Maker: Benjamin Godfrey
Benjamin Godfrey (1699-1741) was apprenticed to John Craig the Westminster jeweller in 1716 for 7 years. In 1729 he acquired a jeweller’s premises in Norris St, just 18 months before the goldsmiths Abraham Buteux and his wife Elizabeth (Eliza) moved their silver manufactory to Norris St. When Buteux died in 1731 his widow Eliza (daughter of Simon Pantin) continued the family business and several months later in 1732 she and Benjamin were married.
Benjamin was not a Huguenot but born to an affluent English family with cousins in the aristocracy. He continued both the retail jeweller’s shop and the silversmith’s premises in Norris St and despite having no experience of silvermaking he entered marks at Goldsmiths Hall as a largeworker, presumably for use by Eliza. 1st mark in 1732, 2nd and 3rd marks in 1739. When Benjamin died in died 1741 Eliza entered her own widow’s mark.
The Godfreys’ work displays strong Huguenot influences in design and fine execution, their later works incorporating rococo designs. Just as one would expect from a family background such as Eliza’s.
biography extracted from Sandra Robinson’s “Simon Pantin & His Children”
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