Tiffany & Co.’s Bryant Vase: The Electrotyping Process

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  • čas přidán 28. 11. 2011
  • Ellenor Alcorn, associate curator in the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, explains the nineteenth-century process of electrotyping and how it was used to create presentation copies of Tiffany and Company's famous silver Bryant Vase.
    Related exhibition:
    Victorian Electrotypes: Old Treasures, New Technology
    On view November 22, 2011, through April 22, 2012
    Transcript:
    Ellenor Alcorn: The Bryant Vase was completed in 1876 by a team of skilled artists working for Tiffany and Company. They worked for more than a year meticulously chasing the sterling silver. Tiffany made a second vase for presentation using the electrotyping process.
    To make an electrotype, molds are taken of each section of the vase. A flexible molding material is applied to the surface -in this case, gutta percha, the sap of an East Indian tree.
    The mold hardens, leaving a precise impression. A coating of graphite makes the interior of the mold electrically conductive. Wires are attached to the inner surface. The mold is suspended in a copper-sulfite bath with a piece of copper and an electrical charge is applied.
    The negatively charged graphite attracts the positively charged copper ions, eventually building up to form a thick copper wall. When the copper is thick enough, the mold is removed from the bath. The copper form is separated from the mold.
    Additional copies can be made using this first example as a master pattern. The edges are trimmed and filed. The sections are soldered together. Then the copper is plated with silver, by immersing it in a bath of silver cyanide with a piece of silver. When the electrical charge is applied, a layer of silver is deposited on the surface.
    In order to perfectly match the original, the copy is oxidized. On the surface, the two vases seem to be identical in every minute detail, though the copper vase was made in much less time.
    Electrotyping had far-reaching uses, in the duplication of works of art, in manufacturing, and in the printing industry. This technology was one of many radical innovations made possible by the growth of electrical science.
    Original Title of Video:
    An Art of Attraction: The Electrotyping Process

Komentáře • 12

  • @dksculpture
    @dksculpture Před 10 lety +12

    An exceptionally clear explanation of electrotyping, both visually and verbally. Thank you.

  • @clintgolub1751
    @clintgolub1751 Před 10 lety +6

    Outstanding job simplifying how electrotyping is done. A video like this truly does more than a paragraph ever could.

  • @nicolasuribestanko
    @nicolasuribestanko Před 12 lety +12

    Great video. One detail: the bath is a solution of copper sulfate (CuSO4), not copper sulfite (Cu2SO3)

  • @nigelcarren
    @nigelcarren Před 11 lety +1

    A perfectly formed vase as well as a perfectly formed presentation. Excellent, thank you.

  • @Brugelbeagle
    @Brugelbeagle Před 12 lety +2

    Excellent descriptions and explanations. The video animation adds clarification. Please do more.

  • @simon_jakobsson
    @simon_jakobsson Před 11 lety

    This is phenomenal. Thanks! :)

  • @ansapes
    @ansapes Před 5 lety

    Un vídeo muy educativo y bueno gracias

  • @aggabus
    @aggabus Před 8 měsíci

    1:40. Additional copies
    Made with..
    (New or the same guta percha)

  • @pritinandapalai3057
    @pritinandapalai3057 Před 3 lety

    Content level is some what different from other

  • @alexmatt4012
    @alexmatt4012 Před rokem +1

    Who else slept while watching the video?

  • @adamlisaandsophiarodaway1302

    the solution used is copper sulfate not sulfite

  • @chemistrygames5811
    @chemistrygames5811 Před 5 lety

    Search. Terminator frog. Spray on copper. New technology for Electrotyping Process. Whitout grafite. Perfect mirrr gloz copy.