Pair of Sugar Casters

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Pair of Sugar Casters

Creator

Paul de Lamerie

British Artist · 1688–1751

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One of the leading English silversmiths in the first half of the 1700s, Paul de Lamerie was renowned for his technical proficiency and innovative designs using bold organic forms. De Lamerie's parents, French Huguenots, probably left France for religious reasons in the 1680s, emigrating to the Netherlands before settling in London in 1691. Although de Lamerie's early works were simple, unornamente

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Date
1730
Medium
Silver gilt
Culture
British
Department
Decorative Arts
Institution
Getty Museum

From the 1660s, cylindrical casters with decoratively pierced covers became popular for sugar and aromatic spices. These casters would have held powdered sugar to be sprinkled over the food at table. Sugar was a relatively rare and therefore expensive commodity until the beginning of the 1700s, when trade with the West Indies, with its large sugar cane plantations, increased its availability. Notches on the sides of these casters indicate that they fitted into a surtout, an assemblage for condiments that formed part of an elaborate silver-gilt table service outfitted with numerous matching plates, serving dishes, and tureens. The casters are engraved with the crest of the prominent Howard family and the arms of the Order of the Garter.

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