Quartz
/ Others
Quartz
A pale pink-coloured or a green-coloured variety
of quartz was carved by the Chinese into decorative
vases and figures. Most examples are clumsy in appearance
and not very carefully carved; few are very old.
Other stones
Many other decorative stones, both large and small,
have been used by lapidaries in both East and West;
the list of them is too long and their descriptions
too involved to be included here. However, mention
must be made of two of the more important.
Derbyshire Spar, known also as Blue John (surmised
to be a corruption of the French 'bleu-jaune' from
the prevalent colours of the stone), an unusually
vividly marked variety of fluorspar mined in Derbyshire,
and made into vases and other ornaments from about
1770. Some of the finer eighteenth-century examples
have ormolu mounts which were made by Matthew Boulton
in Birmingham.
A transparent variety of quartz is rock-crystal,
which was carved with consummate skill in both Classical
and Renaissance times. Examples of European work
are seldom seen outside the principal museums, and
the magnificence of most of the surviving specimens
is a clear indication of why they were, and are still,
so highly valued. Specimens of Chinese carved rock-crystal
are sometimes to be seen. They take similar forms
to jade, and both vases and figures were made.
Hardstones of many kinds were used for the making
of decorative panels, known as Pietre Dure or
Florentine Mosaics, for table-tops and other purposes
by the Italians. A workshop for this purpose was
started by the Grand Duke of Tuscany at the end of
the sixteenth century and, apart from specimens in
museums and collections all over the world, there
is a museum in Florence devoted to the art (the Museo
dell' Opficio delle Pietre Dure). In addition to
making panels to form pictures in the manner of marquetry,
but using coloured marbles and stones instead of
wood, other panels were made with the inset stones
carved in relief: bunches of highly polished cherries
were a popular subject.
The Japanese family of Shibayama introduced the
inlaying of coloured shell and other material into
their ivory carvings, and from this spread the inlaying
of hardstones, mother-of-pearl and anything else
considered suitable into panels of lacquer. All this
inlaid work is known as Shibayama, although it only
faintly resembles the original work of the family.
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Derbyshire
Spar
Derbyshire Spar, known also as Blue John (surmised
to be a corruption of the French 'bleu-jaune' from
the prevalent colours of the stone), an unusually
vividly marked variety of fluorspar mined in Derbyshire,
and made into vases and other ornaments from about
1770.
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