Engraving on English Table Clocks: Art on a Canvas of Brass, 1660 - 1800 |
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Forward |
1 |
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Section I: Setting the stage |
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Why were English table clocks engraved |
9 |
17th and 18th century engraving technique |
15 |
Prior studies of backplate engraving |
33 |
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Section II: England's Golden Age of Horology |
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Background: Engraving on English lantern clocks |
41 |
Early backplate engraving, 1660-1680 |
45 |
Flowers on tulip-engraved clocks during the Golden Age of Horology, 1660-1710 |
61 |
Principal design patterns on tulip-engraved clocks |
97 |
A closer look at tulip engraving |
125 |
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Section III: 18th century backplate engraving |
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Border styles |
155 |
Cartouche designs |
171 |
Inside the cartouche: "London" |
189 |
Arbor areas and mechanical elements attached to the backplate |
201 |
French baroque decoration replaces tulip engraving |
209 |
Huguenot clockmakers come to England |
241 |
Later phase baroque style engraving, 1715-1740 |
259 |
Birds |
279 |
Fruit and flower baskets |
293 |
Vine engraving, 1700-1740 |
313 |
Vine engraving, 1740-1770 |
337 |
Vine engraving, 1770-1800 |
357 |
As the century ends, travel through space and time to China and the ancient world |
365 |
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Appendices |
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Appendix 1: Another look at Tompion's Graver-195: Cluster analysis |
379 |
Appendix 2: Heart-shaped leaves: Joseph Knibb, Thomas Tompion, and others |
397 |
Appendix 3: Huguenot clockmakers in England during the late 17th and early 18th century |
407 |
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References |
411 |
General Index |
418 |
Image Credits |
421 |
Index to Clockmakers |
424 |