Two Percussion Exhibition Pistols

Two Percussion Exhibition Pistols

Gilles Michel Louis Moutier-Le Page

An item at Metropolitan Museum of Art

Commissioned by the renowned Paris gunmaking firm of Le Page, these are the only known pistols executed by Antoine Vechte (1799–1868), a virtuoso silversmith, sculptor, and chiseler, who was famous in his day as the "nineteenth-century Cellini" in reference to the accomplished Renaissance artist Benvenuto Cellini. The pistols are unique in their all-steel construction and in the variety of highly original Renaissance-inspired figural ornament. One of the pistols (acc. no. 2013.514.2) was probably not finished when its companion (acc. no. 2013.514.1) was shown at the French Industry Exhibition in Paris in 1849. Instead, it appears to have been completed by Vechte in London, to which he had emigrated. It certainly was featured at the Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations in London in 1851, where Vechte received a prize medal for his collective achievements.


Arms and Armor

An exhibit at Metropolitan Museum of Art

Two Percussion Exhibition PistolsTwo Percussion Exhibition PistolsTwo Percussion Exhibition PistolsTwo Percussion Exhibition PistolsTwo Percussion Exhibition Pistols

The principal goals of the Arms and Armor Department are to collect, preserve, research, publish, and exhibit distinguished examples representing the art of the armorer, swordsmith, and gunmaker. Arms and armor have been a vital part of virtually all cultures for thousands of years, pivotal not only in conquest and defense, but also in court pageantry and ceremonial events. Throughout time the best armor and weapons have represented the highest artistic and technical capabilities of the society and period in which they were made, forming a unique aspect of both art history and material culture.