Goblet with Maternity Scene

Description

This covered goblet would have been used to serve a beverage known as kandeel, a nourishing mix of eggs, liquor, and cinnamon, commonly served to women shortly after child birth. It is engraved with a design that reflects this, depicting a maternity chamber with a new mother in a canopied bed, a seated nurse rocking a baby in a cradle, a device for drying diapers, two chairs and a table set with two dishes of sweetmeats, and two goblets of the same shape as this one. Along the rim runs the toast T WELVAAREN VAN DE KRAAMVROUW EN KINDJE, which reads, “to the health of the woman in childbed and her baby.”

The engraving is attributed to the Amsterdam glass engraver Jacob Sang (active 1752–62). There was an enormous demand in the Netherlands for personalized glassware, indispensable accessories used to commemorate a wide range of political, commercial, and personal occasions in Dutch drinking culture. Standard themes were commemorated by glasscutters of different skills, who often consulted the same design sources, with varying degrees of success, and applied their engravings to glass blanks of different qualities. Sang was one of Amsterdam’s most skillful and acclaimed engravers, and this covered goblet is a finely-blown vessel with perfectly-placed optic bubbles in the stem.

Provenance

Commissioned by the family Baron van Slingelandt, United Provinces [the present day Netherlands], 18th century [This and the following according to correspondence, copy in curatorial object file]; by descent within the family, the Netherlands; sold to Frides Laméris, Amsterdam, by 2020; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2023.

Goblet with Maternity Scene

Jacob Sang

1750–70

Accession Number

266209

Medium

Wheel-engraved lead glass

Dimensions

25.8 × 11.5 cm (10 1/8 × 4 1/2 in.)

Classification

goblet

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Purchased with funds provided by Mrs. John T. Golitz