Vanity Case (Nécessaire)

Description

Luxurious personal objects were an essential part of a privileged wardrobe during the 1700s and early 1800s, emphasizing their owner’s refinement and wealth. Jewelry, miniatures, and nécessaires—small expensive sets designed to hold grooming, writing, and sewing tools—were often given as intimate gifts, intended to be seen and admired. Their glittering surfaces, however, disguised a system based on the labor and suffering of enslaved or indentured people, whether in gold and stone mines or shops where these goods were made.

Provenance

Duc de Brissac, Paris; Howard F. Stirn [1923-2016], Cleveland, OH, given to the Cleveland Museum of Art (-2009); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (2009-)

Vanity Case (Nécessaire)

[]

c. 1760

Accession Number

2009.69

Medium

gold, agate, interior fitted with gold-mounted implements, mirror

Dimensions

N/A

Classification

Miscellaneous

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Howard F. Stirn