
Cleveland Museum of Art
Cover for a Two-Handled Cup
- Date
- 1686
- Medium
- silver gilt
- Culture
- England, London, 17th century (James II)
- Department
- Decorative Art and Design
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Produced a year after the coronation of James II (1633–1701), this lid and the accompanying cup celebrate the monarchy and reflect the political and social alliances that underpinned the aristocracy during the 1600s. During their coronation, James II and his second wife Mary of Modena (1658–1718) were carried through the city of London under a silk canopy adorned with motifs inspired by European perceptions of Chinese art, known as chinoiserie. Following the procession, the thirty-two lords involved in the ceremony were each offered a portion of the cloth from the canopy as well as sixteen troy ounces of silver from the posts. At least two of them commissioned cups adorned with chinoiserie to be made from the silver. While it is unclear if this cup once belonged to one of the thirty-two peers, it was almost certainly created in response to the same motifs and social developments. This lid accompanies a two-handled cup. See cover record.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Two-Handled Cup and Cover
Cleveland Museum of Art

Two-Handled Cup
Cleveland Museum of Art

Two-handled cup with cover
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Cover for a Two-Handled Cup
Cleveland Museum of Art

Two-handled cup with cover
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Two-Handled Cup and Cover
Cleveland Museum of Art

Two-Handled Cup
Cleveland Museum of Art

Trophy Cup and Cover
Cleveland Museum of Art

Tankard
Cleveland Museum of Art

Cover for a Trophy Cup
Cleveland Museum of Art
Two-Handled Cup with Cover
Art Institute of Chicago

Cover for a Standing Cup
Cleveland Museum of Art