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Sauce-boat
Tanqueray, Anne (daughter of David Willaume I
wife/widow of David Tanqueray, her father's apprentice, and ran his workshop after his death in about 1730)
Sauceboat, sterling silver, standing on a spreading oval foot, the raised oval body with scalloped rim with applied scrolled moulding, two applied cast pouring spouts and two applied double-scroll handles, engraved armorials on the sides, probably of Bullen impaling Aston of Co Devon.
Anne Tanqueray belonged to one of the great Huguenot silversmithing families active in London in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. The double-lipped form of this sauceboat is the earliest used in Britain. A small silver ladle was probably used to serve sauce from the boat.
Collection Area
Art
Item Number
NMW A 51573
Creation/Production
Tanqueray, Anne
Date: 1731-1732
Acquisition
Gift, 6/3/2006
Given in memory of Joan M Gridley
Measurements
Height
(cm): 11.1
Length
(cm): 20.4
Depth
(cm): 18.6
Height
(in): 4
Length
(in): 8
Depth
(in): 7
Techniques
raised
forming
Applied Art
cut
decoration
Applied Art
cast
forming
Applied Art
assembled
forming
Applied Art
engraved
decoration
Applied Art
Material
silver, sterling standard
Location
In store
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