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Source Description
This highly fanciful carafe is shaped as a crowing cockerel: its beak serving as a spout, its crown as a stopper, and its tail as a handle. Around the shoulders, in blue Slavonic script on gilt is written the proverb, Drinking is not a hindrance but youth's diversion. The bird's feathers are mostly treated as diamond shapes in dark and mid-blue enamel. Some, however, are highlighted in black and white and in foil-backed translucent green and red enamel. Its feet are rendered naturalistically in silver gilt. A belt is suspended across the cockerel's belly from two circular buckles. Khlebnikov exhibited an identical carafe at the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition in 1876.The source for the cockerel form was most likely a parcel gilt kubak, or covered cup, made for Ivan the Terrible, Grand Prince of Moscow from 1547 to 1584. Fedor Solntsev illustrated his drawing of the cup in Drevnosti Rossikago gosudarstva (Antiquities of the Russian State) published between 1849 and 1853 (vol. 5, pl. 18). Another more elaborate cockerel-shaped carafe by Khlebnikov, accompanied by some chicken-shaped drinking vessels, known as charkas, can be found in the State History Museum, Moscow (Inv. no. 99834; OK16234-16240).
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
90633
label
Wine Carafe in the Shape of a Cockerel
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
90633
sourceUrl
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Wine Carafe in the Shape of a Cockerel
description
This highly fanciful carafe is shaped as a crowing cockerel: its beak serving as a spout, its crown as a stopper, and its tail as a handle. Around the shoulders, in blue Slavonic script on gilt is written the proverb, Drinking is not a hindrance but youth's diversion. The bird's feathers are mostly treated as diamond shapes in dark and mid-blue enamel. Some, however, are highlighted in black and white and in foil-backed translucent green and red enamel. Its feet are rendered naturalistically in silver gilt. A belt is suspended across the cockerel's belly from two circular buckles. Khlebnikov exhibited an identical carafe at the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition in 1876.The source for the cockerel form was most likely a parcel gilt kubak, or covered cup, made for Ivan the Terrible, Grand Prince of Moscow from 1547 to 1584. Fedor Solntsev illustrated his drawing of the cup in Drevnosti Rossikago gosudarstva (Antiquities of the Russian State) published between 1849 and 1853 (vol. 5, pl. 18). Another more elaborate cockerel-shaped carafe by Khlebnikov, accompanied by some chicken-shaped drinking vessels, known as charkas, can be found in the State History Museum, Moscow (Inv. no. 99834; OK16234-16240).
provenance
Jean M. Riddell, Washington, D.C.; by bequest to Walters Art Museum, 2010.
date
1874
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
jugs (vessels)
carafes
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Overall H carafe with stopper: 8 1/2 in. (21.6 cm); Carafe H: 7 1/8 × W: 4 13/16 × D: 3 9/16 in. (18.1 × 12.2 × 9 cm); Stopper H: 2 1/16 × W: 7/8 in. (5.2 × 2.3 cm)
Source extras
inscriptions
[Marks] In Cyrillic: IKh over 1874 (unidentified Moscow assay master act: 1872-1881)
88
St. George right; [Marks] In Cyrillic: Khlebnikov
ermine canopy mark; [Translation] In Slavonic on vessel: Drinking is not a hindrance but youth's diversion
med
silver gilding, champlevé enamel
creator_ids
4344
collection_ids
EAN
exhibition_ids
3423
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
07b769afeef8427c