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Royal Scottish Academy Associate’s Bronze Medal (Cased)

Primary artist: Paton, Joseph Noel, Sir, RSA · 1821-1901Die-maker: Wyon, Benjamin · 1802-1858Case-makers: Milne, William and Milne, JamesRecipient: Gibb I, Robert, RSA · 1801-1837Printmaker: Kirkwood and Son, Alexander · b. 1826

On 28 August 1850 at a General Meeting of the Royal Scottish Academy, it was first proposed that there be struck a Presidential Medal. This was to take the form of a medal suspended from a chain to be worn by the President. On 17 January 1853 the Academy sent two drawings (presumably showing the recto and verso faces) to designs by Sir Joseph Noel Paton to the London based Medallist and Dye-Sinker, Benjamin Wyon (1802-58). The 1851 RSA Annual Report (Notice VII) refers to the “protracted indisposition of Mr Noel Paton” which had prevented him from finishing the design for the obverse of the President’s medal and the new Diploma. “Mr Paton has supplied a finished drawing, on a large scale, of the Reverse of the Medal, which has already met the warmest approval of the Council and the Academy; his attention, since his convalescene, has been frequently directed to the remaining drawings, and the Council believe that at an early period they will be enabled to submit them for the inspection of the Academy.” The 1853 RSA Annual Report (Notice VII) continued;’ “The Council have been in frequent correspondence with Mr J Noel Paton RSA who, on the request of the Academy, had consented to give designs for the medal, to be worn as part of the insignia of his office by their President; and they eventually received from that gentleman, on 14th January, his matured designs for the obverse and reverse of this interesting work….” Wyon agreed to undertake to engrave the dies for the medal in a letter to D O Hill dated 25 January 1853. He wrote; “I feel gratified at being embursed by your Council with the execution of Dies from a design possessing so much beauty and originality as Mr Paton has succeeded in producing and which is so admirably adapted for medallion effect, and beg to assure the Council that I shall spare no pains in my endeavour to render the work as perfect as I can make it. I shall require about eight months time to complete the dies and 120 guineas….”

The President’s Medal was received in Edinburgh in time to be tabled at the Council Meeting on 12 March 1855 and Noel Paton thereafter was asked to design the chain and also the pendant by which to suspend the medal (RSA Council Minutes 15 and 27 March 1855). The RSA Annual Report for 1854 (Notice V) however suggests the medal had been received earlier; “The Council have now the pleasure of placing on the table of the Academy, the first impressions in bronze of the President’s Medal…..The Council have thought proper to await the decision of the Academicians, before directing that the copy to be worn by the president be struck in gold….It has been suggested in the Council, that copies of the medal should be struck in bronze or silver for each of the Academicians, their names and date of election being respectively engraved on the reverse….The Academy will also probably agree, that copies should be prepared and presented to those of the Honorary Members whose services they may wish so to recognize; and they will now have the power of marking their sense of the merit of Students, by awarding, with due care and discretion, bronze copies of the medal as leading prizes for merit.” The RSA Annual Report for 1855,(Notice IV) records that the President’s Gold medal was received on the day the foundation stone of the New National Galleries was laid, and (Notice V) that a bronze copy of it with the Keith Prize was to be awarded to Alexander Lauder as the most distinguished student at the last Annual Competition in the Department of the Antique in the School of the Board of Manufactures, and the same to be given to the successful candidate for the Keith prize in 1854, Robert Herdman.

An initial stock of 100 bronze and 40 silver medals was ordered from Wyon in May 1857 and were received by 27 October 1857 and the first had been engraved by Kirkwood by 11 December that same year.

Wyon’s original steel dies, the property of the Academy, are with Alex Kirkwood & Son, who succeeded Wyon as the medallist used by the Academy for making its various medals. They are protected from splitting by the addition of an outer collar and are preserved from rust by a layer of fine grease. The metal is annealed before being placed in the die-press and it can take several visits to the press to ensure that all the detail has come up satisfactorily. The medals are washed, dried, polished, given a light lacquer and then subjected to a final turn in the press.

The cases for the medals were originally made and supplied by W & J Milne, Stationers, 33 Hanover Street, Edinburgh, who agreed to make the boxes as per Noel Paton’s proposals; viz maroon morocco 4 ¾ inches (for bronze medals) and ditto rose morocco (for silver medals) all lined with the richest blue silk velvet at 8/- per case, to be blocked in gold (to Noel Paton’s design) at extra cost and the recipient’s name to be added at 6d per case.(letter W & J Milne to D O Hill, 29 May 1857) The initial batch of 60 (bronze) and 30 (silver) cases were delivered to the RSA on 22 December 1857.

The Associate’s medal was awarded by the Academy from 1857 until the Second World War. It was revived again in 1974 and from that date until the abolition of the Associate rank in 2005 Associates desiring a medal were asked to pay for it. (vide RSA Annual Report, 1974, Notice XVII “The presentation of medals to members on the occasion of their election – silver for Academicians, bronze for Associates – ceased when stocks were exhausted following the outbreak of war in 1939. The pleasing tradition of our members – and those that come after them – being able to possess these replicas of Noel Paton’s design of the Gold Presidential badge has been reintroduced, the circumstances of our times making it necessary for this to be against payment.”).

The hallmarking of the Academician’s silver medals commenced only in the late 20th Century.

A miniature version of the medals was also made by Alex Kirkwood & Son (vide 2015.104) hung on a short silk ribbon (known both in blue and in maroon) and with a hinged clasp with legend RSA in raised lettering attached to the top edge of the ribbon. Kirkwood own the four dies for this (medal obverse and reverse, and clasp bar for each of RSA and ARSA). These dies are stamped Kirkwood and dated 1934.

In addiiton to making the original steel dies for the obverse and reverse of this medal, Wyon also struck the first 40 silver and 100 bronze medals in 1857

since Wyon's death in 1858 the dies for this medal have been deposited with Alexander Kirkwood & Son, Edinburgh who from time to time have struck new copies as earlier stocks have been used

since the introduction of the medal in 1857 all the engraving of the recipient's details has been conducted by Alexander Kirkwood & Son

The cases for the medals were originally made and supplied by W & J Milne, Stationers, 33 Hanover Street, Edinburgh, who agreed to make the boxes as per Noel Paton’s proposals; viz maroon morocco 4 ¾ inches (for bronze medals) and ditto rose morocco (for silver medals) all lined with the richest blue silk velvet at 8/- per case, to be blocked in gold (to Noel Paton’s design) at extra cost and the recipient’s name to be added at 6d per case.(letter W & J Milne to D O Hill, 29 May 1857) The initial batch of 60 (bronze) and 30 (silver) cases were delivered to the RSA on 22 December 1857.

Gibb was one of the original founding members of the Academy, he suffered from mental health issues and was admitted to an Edinburgh Asylum where he spent the last months o f his life, his fees and funeral expenses being paid by the Academy (vide RSA Vouchers)



Additional details

  • Object data

    Date1857
    Accession2015.091
    Materials Support bronze
    Case wood, brass, satin, velvet
    Dimensions 6.8cm x 0.8cm x 12cm x 12cm x 1.5cm
  • Exhibitions

    No exhibition data for this record.