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The Rise and Fall of Cork Model Collections in Britain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 November 2017
Abstract
Commencing in the late 1760s, cork models of classical monuments in Italy were purchased by wealthy British collectors while on their Grand Tour. Initially commissioned by tourists with specific antiquarian and architectural interests, the models were an expression of the collector's knowledge of classical history and of their Neoclassical sensibility. Models soon appeared in the Society of Antiquaries of London and the British Museum, in the private displays of Charles Townley and John Stuart, Earl of Bute, and in George III's royal collection. In the early 1800s, architect John Soane began purchasing models from the secondary market for his house museum. Interest in cork architectural models waned during the Nineteenth Century. Descendants of the original owners transferred them to public institutions, while museums that had at first enthusiastically welcomed the donations or made their own purchases, relegated the models to storage. In the twentieth century the majority of the models were discarded or lost. This paper explores the reasons for the enthusiastic acquisition of architectural cork models and their subsequent demise.
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References
NOTES
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90 Melbourne, Museum Victoria Archives, R. Henry Walcott, ‘Report of the Curator, Industrial & Technological Museum’, 2 March 1930. For details of this model, see http://collections.museumvictoria.com.au/items/715107 (accessed 3 June 2016). The six cork models of Greek temples at Paestum and Agrigento remain in the V&A collection in storage, most requiring extensive conservation.
91 Grand Tour, pp. 298–99; Tim Knox personal communication, 28 July 2016.
92 ‘Greek Temple Made of Cork Sells for 25,000 Pounds at Auction, at http://eu.greekreporter.com/2014/03/10/greek-temple-made-of-cork-sells-for-25000-pounds-at-auction/ (accessed 1 April 2014); Roland Arkell, ‘Grand Tour Model Brings Corking Result’, Antiques Trade Gazette, 2 October 2015, at https:// www.antiquestradegazette.com/news/2015/grand-tour-model-brings-corking-result/ (accessed 7 March 2016).
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