LONDON.- An Anglo-Saxon gold pendant, found in Winfarthing, Norfolk and acquired by Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery, is announced today as winner of Britains favourite work of art acquired for a museum with
Art Fund support in 2018. It is currently on display at the British Library as part of its Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms exhibition.
The pendant was voted the nations favourite acquisition of the year from a shortlist of 10 works of art and objects that Art Fund helped UK museums to buy in 2018. 5,000 members of the public voted. The shortlist of works ranged from Grayson Perrys Posh Art at Victoria Art Gallery, Artemisia Gentileschis Self-Portrait as Saint Catherine of Alexandria at the National Gallery, Yinka Shonibares Earth at Wolverhampton Art Gallery, Leonora Carringtons Portrait of Max Ernst at National Galleries of Scotland to an unknown artists Am not I a man and a brother at the International Slavery Museum.
Dr Tim Pestell, Senior Curator of Archaeology at Norfolk Museums Service, said: We are absolutely thrilled that the Winfarthing Pendant has been named as Britains favourite work of art in the Art Funds annual poll, especially so given the quality of this years shortlist which contained some truly remarkable works. Its intriguing to think what the pendants seventh-century creator would make of the lasting appeal of their masterpiece, well over a millennium after it was first crafted. Wed like to say a huge thank you to everyone that voted for this unique treasure and were looking forward to it going back on display in the Anglo-Saxon and Viking Gallery here at Norwich Castle in spring 2019, after it returns from its loan to the British Library for Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms: Art, Word, War.
Discovered in December 2014 by a metal detectorist, the seventh-century gold and garnet pendant is the highlight of a trove of artefacts unearthed in Winfarthing, near Diss. The excavation, carried out by Norfolk County Councils Find Identification and Recording Service, found the grave to belong to an aristocratic Anglo-Saxon lady who died between AD 650-675 and was buried among some of her most valued possessions.
The pendant was declared treasure under the 1996 Treasure Act and was purchased in 2018 by Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery with support from the National Heritage Memorial Fund, Art Fund and the Friends of Norwich Museums.