Postby blakstone » Sun Oct 12, 2008 1:10 pm
Although I haven't yet been able to attribute this mark, I can tell you that it is in fact a Hanau pseudo-mark; it usually appears with an eagle, a faux Augsburg mark, a human profile, or some combination of the three. The box is typical of the late 19th/early 20th century Hanau work.
Hanau pieces turn up frequently in these threads, and it looks like posters are getting much more savvy about recognizing them. Items with elaborate architectural, bucolic or romantic scenes embossed onto sheet silver (as here) should immediately be suspect. (If identical scenes are repeated on the same piece, it's a dead giveaway to mechanical embossing, not true répoussé or chasing). Likewise, elaborately pierced edges with swags and scrolls framing portrait medallions are typical of Hanau work. It takes many, many hours (or years!) studying true Mannerist and Rococo designs, but once having done so, the anachronistic and overly sentimentalized nature of most Hanau reproductions will be immediately recognizable.
Which is not to knock Hanau work; I, for one, think they are coming into their own as a collectible genre of silver, and rightly so. The best Hanau pieces are true works of art: spectacular reproductions of otherwise totally unaffordable masterpieces. And even the less grand items remain what they were then: attractive, appealing, affordable, and generally well-made decorative pieces.