Ian Eaves | |
---|---|
Born | Ian Donald Dietrich Eaves |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Arms and armour researcher and consultant |
Known for | Catalogues of armour in the Royal Collection and in the Fitzwilliam Museum |
Ian Donald Dietrich Eaves, MVO FSA , is a British researcher and consultant on arms and armour. [1] He served as the Keeper of Armour at the Royal Armouries for eighteen years, from 1978 to 1996. [2] Also starting in 1978, and continuing until 1983, he served as the editor of the Journal of the Arms & Armour Society; he was appointed the society's president in 1995, [1] and currently serves as a vice-president emeritus. [3] He has written and translated several articles for journals, including the society's. [4] [5] [6]
As of 2019, Eaves works as a consultant on arms and armour, and has been commissioned to create several catalogues of large collections. [7] In 2002 he published Catalogue of European Armour at the Fitzwilliam Museum , and in 2016 he coauthored the long-awaited Arms & Armour in the Collection of Her Majesty The Queen, a 528-page work which Eaves had been working on for more than a decade. He has also coauthored a volume of an illustrated miniature series, The Art of the Gun: European Firearms Masterpieces from the 17th to the 19th Centuries. Eaves's work as a consultant has also included duties for auction houses, including Sotheby's and Thomas Del Mar Limited. [8]
Eaves has also collected armour himself; one of his former pieces is now owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. [9]
Eaves was interested in arms and armour from a young age, writing his first school project on the subject at the age of ten. [1] In 1978 the Royal Armouries, located in the Tower of London, appointed him Keeper of Armour; he held the position for eighteen years. [1] While there he helped secure the long-term loan of the Barendyne helmet, which Eaves later termed "the greatest piece I have been instrumental in acquiring in my period at the Armouries". [10] [note 1] Also in 1978 Eaves was made honorary editor of the Journal of the Arms & Armour Society, serving in that role until 1983. [1] Eaves has also collected pieces of armour himself; one piece, an Italian defense from a left arm, dating to around 1510–1520, is now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. [9]
In 1981 Eaves was awarded the Frances E. Markoe Fellowship in Memory of Stephen A. Caldwell and Frances C. F. Caldwell by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. [12] The scholarship enabled him to research the museum's collection of European armour, [1] specifically the use and development of the brigandine. [12] Eaves's time at the museum coincided with the ninth triennial congress of the International Association of Museums of Arms and Military History, held across September and October. [13] The congress included a medieval banquet planned and funded by Ronald S. Lauder, and held in the hall housing the museum's arms and armour collection. [13] The New York Times covered the event. "Many of the guests last night cast covetous eyes at the museum's collection, which is among the best in the world", the Times wrote, quoting "a smiling Ian D.D. Eaves, curator of The Armories at Her Majesty's Tower of London" as saying "'There's a number of things I'd like to make off with if I could be sure I would be undetected'". [13] [note 2] The article went on to note that Eaves would be continuing at the Metropolitan Museum for an additional two months, in order to undertake "a detailed examination" of some of the museum's British items. [13] The following year, in 1982, Eaves became a consultant curator for the Higgins Armory Museum in Worcester, Massachusetts. [1] Among other duties during this time, he lectured on the armours of King Henry VIII of England. [5] [6]
In 1996 Eaves left the Royal Armouries and became a consultant on arms and armour, [10] [17] work he still does as of 2019. [1] The work includes research, along with cataloging and editing, for museums and institutions across Europe and North America. [1] Institutions Eaves has worked for include the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Fitzwilliam Museum of the University of Cambridge, and the Worshipful Company of Armourers and Brasiers in London. [1] Eaves has also provided consulting services for auction houses. [8] [18] He worked at Sotheby's until 2005, when Thomas Del Mar, the head of the company's arms and armour business, left to form Thomas Del Mar Limited, and took Eaves and Franciska Ekman with him. [18] The new company continued to work on a contractual basis with Sotheby's, "effectively allow[ing] Sotheby's to buy in the expertise for their sales programme as and when they require it," as one trade publication put it, "while allowing the specialists to develop their own businesses and client services." [18]
In 1983 Eaves was awarded the Research Medal of the Arms & Armour Society, [1] for services to the study of arms and armour. The following year, on 12 January 1984, he was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London. [1] [19] Since 1995, Eaves has served as the honorary president of the Arms & Armour Society. [1]
As part of the 2017 New Year Honours, announced on 31 December 2016, Eaves was appointed a Member of the Royal Victorian Order, "[f]or services to the Royal Collection." [20]
Eaves has been commissioned to create catalogues for multiple large collections of arms and armour, including the Royal Collection and the Fitzwilliam collection. [7] He has also published a number of scholarly articles and books, and is a coauthor of a volume from a five-volume miniature book series, The Art of the Gun. [1]
In 2000, Eaves was approached to continue the work of producing a comprehensive catalogue of armour held in the Royal Collection. The project was intended to fill a gap in scholarship and supersede the somewhat cursory efforts of Guy Laking that had been published in 1904. The Laking work had included only the works he considered to be highlights of the collection, despite his assertion that "each item ... can stand the most severe scrutiny", and at 283 pages it was just over half the length of Eaves's later catalogue. [21]
Efforts at a successor work to Laking's catalogue had begun in the 1980s as part of a wider cataloguing collaboration between Claude Blair, the keeper of metalwork at the Victoria and Albert Museum, who acted as general editor, and two senior figures at the Royal Armouries, A. V. B. Norman (armour, edged weapons) and Howard Blackmore (firearms). Although a draft was prepared in eight years, "an amazing achievement" in the words of Geoffrey de Bellaigue, Surveyor of the Queen's Works of Art from 1972 to 1996, the deaths of Norman in 1998 and Blackmore in 1999 threatened completion of the project. In 2000 Eaves, then Keeper of Armour at the Royal Armouries, was asked to take on the task, both updating and extending Norman's work and also adding completely new entries. Tobias Capwell, a curator at the Wallace Collection, said in his review of the resulting book - Arms & Armour in the Collection of Her Majesty The Queen (2016) - that
The book's complicated history makes the materialisation of this work all the more impressive. Despite being aware of the progress of the project previously, I could never have been prepared for the experience of opening a package to find "new" work by a leading figure in the field who departed this life nearly 20 years ago. Beyond Norman's central authorial role, the detailed introduction by Howard Blackmore comes as a complete surprise, while the extent of Blair's direct involvement could not have been fully anticipated either. New words, from three of the 20th century's great scholars, defying time and the grave. [21]
Eaves's 2002 work Catalogue of European Armour at the Fitzwilliam Museum was the result of a private commission, through a grant by the museum. [22] The work, approaching a collection largely comprising sixteenth-century German and North Italian field armour, categorised the pieces by whole armours, half armours, helmets, parts armour, and horse armour. [22] Described as an "excellent" if rather expensive book with "[e]very rivet, hinge, plate, crack, pitting, internal washer, decoration, internal lining, lames, etc. ... carefully noted to provide an accurate assessment of the piece", it was nonetheless found to contain flaws when reviewed by David M. Oster. [22] Eaves, according to Oster, was himself dissatisfied with some elements of the book's structure, which were imposed upon him by the Fitzwilliam Museum. [22] Oster also noted that Eaves had no hand in the selection of illustrations or writing their associated captions, some of which contain errors. [2]
In 2003 Eaves coauthored the second volume of a five-volume miniature book series, The Art of the Gun. [23] The heavily illustrated series displayed highlights of the collection of Robert M. Lee, a philanthropist and collector, whose interest in cars led to two best in shows at the Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance. [24] The books covered guns from the Renaissance through the twenty-first century; the volume coauthored by Eaves, European Firearms Masterpieces from the 17th to the 19th Centuries, displayed highly decorated examples from the era. [23] As described by the publisher, it served as a "celebrat[ion of] the art, craftsmanship, romance and performance of fine firearms, throughout the ages." [23]
Eaves has written a number of scholarly articles, many of which were published in the Journal of the Arms & Armour Society; Eaves also translated a work by the German scholar Ortwin Gamber for the journal. [25] Eaves has also written for other journals, including on the tournament armours worn by King Henry VIII of England. [4]
Papers written or translated by Eaves include:
The Royal Armouries is the United Kingdom's national collection of arms and armour. Originally an important part of England's military organization, it became the United Kingdom's oldest museum, originally housed in the Tower of London from the 15th century, and one of the oldest museums in the world. It is also one of the oldest and largest collections of arms and armour in the world, comprising the UK's National Collection of Arms and Armour, National Artillery Collection, and National Firearms Collection. Its historic base is in the Tower of London, but today the collection is split across three sites: the Tower, the Royal Armouries Museum in Leeds, and Fort Nelson near Portsmouth
Royal Armouries Ms. I.33 is the earliest known surviving European fechtbuch, and one of the oldest surviving martial arts manuals dealing with armed combat worldwide. I.33 is also known as the Walpurgis manuscript, after a figure named Walpurgis shown in the last sequence of the manuscript, and "the Tower manuscript" because it was kept in the Tower of London during 1950-1996; also referred to as British Museum No. 14 E iii, No. 20, D. vi.
The Wallace Collection is a museum in London occupying Hertford House in Manchester Square, the former townhouse of the Seymour family, Marquesses of Hertford. It is named after Sir Richard Wallace, who built the extensive collection, along with the Marquesses of Hertford, in the 18th and 19th centuries. The collection features fine and decorative arts from the 15th to the 19th centuries with important holdings of French 18th-century paintings, furniture, arms and armour, porcelain and Old Master paintings arranged into 25 galleries. It is open to the public and entry is free.
The Kremlin Armoury, is one of the oldest museums of Moscow, located in the Moscow Kremlin, now a part of Moscow Kremlin Museums.
Sir Guy Francis Laking, 2nd Baronet was an English art historian and the first keeper of the London Museum from before its opening until his death.
The Royal Armouries Museum in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, is a national museum which displays the National Collection of Arms and Armour. It is part of the Royal Armouries family of museums, the other sites being the Tower of London, its traditional home, Fort Nelson, Hampshire, for the display of its National Collection of Artillery, and permanent galleries within the Frazier History Museum in Louisville, Kentucky, USA. The Royal Armouries is a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.
Sir Samuel Rush Meyrick, KH was an English collector and scholar of arms and armour. He lived at Goodrich Court, Goodrich, Herefordshire, and introduced systematic principles to the study of his subject.
Greenwich armour is the plate armour in a distinctively English style produced by the Royal Almain Armoury founded by Henry VIII in 1511 in Greenwich near London, which continued until the English Civil War. The armoury was formed by imported master armourers hired by Henry VIII, initially including some from Italy and Flanders, as well as the Germans who dominated during most of the 16th century. The most notable head armourer of the Greenwich workshop was Jacob Halder, who was master workman of the armoury from 1576 to 1607. This was the peak period of the armoury's production and it coincided with the elaborately gilded and sometimes coloured decorated styles of late Tudor England.
Sir Caspar Purdon Clarke was an English architect and museum director.
John Hewitt (1807–1878) was an English antiquarian.
Sir James Gow Mann was an eminent figure in the art world in the mid twentieth century, specialising in the study of armour.
The Brocas helm is a jousting helm on display at the Rotunda as part of the Tower of London armoury collection. It was commissioned by an English knight from an Italian armourer.
The Royal Armoury of Madrid or Real Armería de Madrid, between many other things, the collection contains the personal arms of the Kings of Spain, and also houses military weapons, armours and diplomatic works of art like mixed tapestries, paintings and other works of art and trophies. Among the most notable parts of the collection features armor and full tools that Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Philip II used. It is considered, along with the Imperial Armory of Vienna, one of the best in the world., and even it is often described as "the best collection of its kind in the world".
Anton Peffenhauser was the foremost armourer in Augsburg during the late 16th century. He was trained by members of the Helmschmied family. He frequently collaborated with the armor etcher, Jörg Sörg the Younger, his exact contemporary, and their works are documented in a manuscript known as the Stuttgarter Harnischmüsterbuch. Peffenhauser worked for numerous princes in the Holy Roman Empire and beyond, and his workshop was especially favored by the Prince-Electors of Saxony, the Dukes of Bavaria, and members of the Spanish court.
Rupert Williamson has been a Designer and creator of one-off furniture for over 40 years with work in many museums and public collections, together with his work written about and illustrated in many books and articles.In 1999 he received a PhD for his thesis “New Forms of Imagery in Furniture". The Reflections of a Designer working in the Craft Revival of the 1970s and beyond” together with a major collection of his designs.
Guy Murray Wilson, is a British military historian, curator, and museum director. From 1988 to 2002, he was Master of the Armouries and head of the Royal Armouries, the United Kingdom's national museum for arms and armour.
Claude Blair, was a British museum curator and scholar, who specialised in European arms and armour. He is particularly known for his book European Armour: circa 1066 to circa 1700 (1958). He worked in the Royal Armouries at the Tower of London from 1951 to 1956, before moving to the Department of Metalwork at the Victoria and Albert Museum, where he remained until his retirement as Keeper of Metalwork in 1982. He was active in church conservation, and served as a Vice-President of the Society of Antiquaries of London from 1990 to 1993.
Ortwin Gamber is an Austrian art historian and director of the weapons collection at the Kunsthistorisches Museum from 1976 to 1986. He had previously volunteered and following his 1950 graduation, worked at the museum since 1945. He is also a noted weapon collector, and has written several books and articles on the subject.
Tobias Emanuel ("Toby") Capwell FSA is an American historian who lives and works in London. His principal interest is in European arms and armour of the mediaeval and Renaissance periods. He is Curator of arms and armour at the Wallace Collection in London. He has written and spoken extensively on both the historical and the practical aspects of his subject. He is a skilled jouster, and has claimed to be the world's only jousting curator.
John Waller was an English pioneer of the historical European martial arts (HEMA) revival, a fight director for stage, screen and spectacle, and a teacher of martial arts.