D1160. Polychrome Fluted Oval Barber’s Bowl
€9.500,00
Delft or Schiedam, circa 1765
Painted in iron-red, yellow, manganese, green and blue in the center with bamboo, peonies and other flowering plants growing around a pierced rock in a fenced garden within three floral sprays alternating with three winged insects on the irregularly fluted rim, its lower edge with a neck notch, and its left side with an oval depression for the shaving ball, the foot rim pierced with two holes for suspension.
Dimensions
Length: 27 cm. (10 5/8 in.)
In stock
Description
Note
Other than often assumed, the round or oval depression at the side of a barber’s bowl was not intended to house a piece of soap but rather a shaving ball. The barber would have asked his customer to put this small wooden ball in his mouth between his cheek and gum while foaming him up and shaving him, in order to get a closer shave. The oval depression on the side of the bowler also made the bowl fit the throat of the customer, which had as result that no soap fell on his clothes.
From the middle ages onward the barber did not only shave your beard. Since he made both his knives to shave beards, and axes, and sharp surgeon knives and scissors and the pliers to pull teeth, the barber’s field of activity included that of a surgeon, a kind of combination of a dentist and physician. Pulling molars and blood-letting were the most common treatments. Someone who did all of this at the same time is called the ‘barber surgeon’.
From a simple oval or circular utilitarian metal form, barber’s bowls in Delftware developed throughout the eighteenth century into elegant rococo shapes, of which the present bowl is an unusually spirited example.