● On view now — Gallery 239
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
In the late 18th century brilliant-cut steel beads became highly fashionable. The style, which may have originated in England, quickly spread to the French and Russian courts. These beads were set into walking sticks, buckles, buttons, and hilts like this fine example made by Thomas Prosser, an eminent cutler in Bloomsbury, London. The decorations added a bedazzling effect as flickering candlelight reflected off the hilt in dimly lit rooms. Caricatures from the period lampoon this flashy style by showing a lady overcome by the bright light emitting from a gentleman’s cut-steel accessories.
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Hilt and scabbard fittings; northern Indian
Blade: probaby E
Hilt: Flemish or Dutch; blade: French — Composite Smallsword
English — Sword of Winthrop Sargent (1753-1820), First Gover
French — Smallsword with Portraits of Monarchs from the Bour
French — Smallsword for a Child
German
Blade possibly Spanish — Parrying Poniard
Hilt: northern European (possibly Swedish)
Blade: possibly I
Silversmith: John Berthellot (English)
Cutler: Matthew Feese
Blade: Peter Munch
Germany, Solingen, c. 1595-1660 — Smallsw
Probably German — Smallsword
Hilt: Portuguese or Spanish; blade: probably German — Dress
German — Boar Sword