Antiques Christmas quiz featuring TheSaleroom.com
19 December 2023 Think you know your kitchenalia from your railwayana? Can you pick out a pin cushion or button hook? Try your hand at our antiques quiz featuring lots from TheSaleroom.com.Q. What is this?
A. A firescreen. Originally firescreens were large, created to go in front of the hearth, but in the 18th century the pole screen developed which was placed between a person and the fire, often positioned to shield a single person's face.
Q. How old is the earliest know terracotta sculpture (hint: not pictured).
A. c.25,000 years. Terracotta, made by baking clay, is a relatively straightforward process and its use as an art material appears relatively early in history. The Venus of Dolni Vestonice is a Czech prehistoric sculpture and measures less than 5 inches high.
Q. Antiques are generally considered to be older than _______ years old.
a. 75
b. 100
c. 250
A. B
Q. However, traditionally, objects were only considered to be collector-worthy antiques if they were made _______.
a. before 1830, before the dawn of the Age of Industry.
b. before 1400 when the 'Age of Exploration' meant that fewer objects were produced in cultural isolation.
c. before the c.5th century AD with the end of Classical antiquity.
a. A
Q. Who went on the Grand Tour?
A. No, we don't mean Jeremey Clarkson and friends. Historically the Grand Tour was a trip taken by young, upper class European (usually British) young men of the 16th to 19th centuries. It centered around Italy as the centre of Classical culture. A souvenier industry sprang up around it, selling both antiquities and items to recall Classical splendour.
Q. What is this?
A. A cheese dome. Today these are usually glass, but in the past they came in different materials, such as this example.