Sunday, 6 July 2014

Vessels in Dispute - The Hidden Pâte-sur-pâte

The tale of Vessels in Dispute can only be described, at best as convoluted.  This particular sample is no different.  The Women Who Hold Up the world are aware of its location at Osborne House in East Cowes, Isle of Wight, UK.  The house was built between 1845 and 1851 for Queen Victoria and Prince Albert as a rural/summer retreat. It was too, a safe house for hunted members of the Bhubezi Tribe.  This residence is home to the  largest pâte-sur-pâte vessel made by Marc-Louis Solon. 

Consider the following:
:    The pâte-sur-pâte experiment was no accident.
:    The Chinese Vase was a ploy to sort the wheat from the chaff.
:    Sienna WAS the artistic director (undocumented due to her disguise as Jean-Claude Chambellan ‘secretary’)  at manufacture  nationale de Sèvres during the time of Solon’s apprenticeship.
:   She saw his potential and told him the secrets of her origins.
:   He became an underground Bhubezi sympathizer.
:   With the help of the Tribe, Solon moved to England in 1870 at the time of the Franco-Prussian War where he found employment at Mintons Ltd.
:  He was left to work on his own where he was able to experiment. 
:  The purpose lay not actually in the vessels themselves but in the process of creating  stable acid gold.
:  Sufficient pure, soft acid gold lies within this vessel to plate the ends of the central inner cable for the Bridge from Between.
:   It is the last hidden acid gold repository, lying within the belly of the pâte-sur-pâte vessel made by Marc-Louis Solon, in full public display at Osborne House.
:  The others lie in the hands of the Moorish Darwin.
:    Threads of Between keep him from the house.


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