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Nineteenth-Century American Silver

Silver had long been associated with ceremony and achievement, but during the nineteenth century the preponderance of presentation vessels became even greater.
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Plateau, Benjamin Halsted  American, Silver and glass, American
Benjamin Halsted
1790–1805
Tea or hot water urn, John McMullin  American, silver with ivory handle, American
John McMullin
1799
Sauceboat, Anthony Rasch  American, Silver, American
Anthony Rasch
ca. 1815
Presentation Vase, Thomas Fletcher  American, Silver, American
Thomas Fletcher
Sidney Gardiner
1824
The Magnolia Vase, Tiffany & Co., Silver, enamel, gold, and opals, American
Tiffany & Co.
1893
Entree Dish, Taylor and Lawrie, Silver, American
Taylor and Lawrie
Bailey and Kitchen
ca. 1839
The Bryant Vase, Tiffany & Co., Silver and gold, American
Multiple artists/makers
1876
Plateau, John W. Forbes  American, Silver, glass with walnut, American
John W. Forbes
ca. 1825
Vase, Tiffany & Co., Silver, American
Tiffany & Co.
1877
Tray, Tiffany & Co., Silver, copper, brass, gold-copper alloy, and copper-platinum-iron alloy, American
Tiffany & Co.
1879–80
Teakettle, John C. Moore  American, Silver, American
John C. Moore
Ball, Tompkins and Black
1850
Vase, Gorham Manufacturing Company  American, Silver and copper, American
Gorham Manufacturing Company
1880
Teapot, Tiffany & Co., Silver, silver-gilt, enamel and ivory, American
Tiffany & Co.
ca. 1887
Ewer, Thomas Fletcher  American, Silver, American
Thomas Fletcher
1830–40
Viking Punch Bowl, Tiffany & Co., Iron, silver, gold, and streaked ebony, American
Tiffany & Co.
Paulding Farnham
ca. 1893
The Adams Vase, Paulding Farnham  American, Gold, amethysts, spessartites, tourmalines, fresh water pearls, quartzes, rock crystal, and enamel, American
Paulding Farnham
Tiffany & Co.
1893–95
Smith and Wesson .44 New Model No. 3 Single-Action Revolver, serial no. 25120, Smith & Wesson  American, Steel, silver, nickel, American, Springfield, Massachusetts and New York
Smith & Wesson
Tiffany & Co.
ca. 1888
Ewer and Plateau, Gorham Manufacturing Company  American, Silver, American
Gorham Manufacturing Company
Spaulding and Company
1901

During the first quarter of the nineteenth century, American silversmiths exchanged the refined, elegant aesthetic of the late 1780s and ’90s for a bolder, more substantial style. The attenuated urns, engraved swags, and geometric plinths associated with the early Federal period gave way to heavier forms, sculptural ornament, and a more confident classicism. By the 1810s, Egyptian and Imperial Roman forms were joining the artistic vocabulary, inspired by the published drawings of Charles Percier and Pierre Fontaine, who had accompanied Napoleon on his Egyptian campaign. French Empire styling became fashionable, particularly for dining silver. Skillfully sculpted and cast ornament, such as serpent handles or winged lion’s feet (), reflect French influence as well. Elaborate die-stamped borders () replaced the delicate beading or bright-cut engraving characteristic of late eighteenth-century ornament.

Silver had long been associated with ceremony and achievement, but during the nineteenth century the preponderance of presentation vessels became even greater. Political and civic successes were celebrated with monumental gifts of silver. The opening of the Erie Canal in 1825, for example, which set the stage for the commercial and artistic growth of New York City, prompted the creation of the extraordinary pair of vases presented to Governor DeWitt Clinton (). Although inspired formally by a colossal antique marble urn, the vases are ornamented with American iconography and surmounted by American eagle finials.

The Rococo Revival style emerged during the 1830s as silversmiths and patrons rediscovered mid-eighteenth-century design. Shells and scrolls once again adorned dinnerwares (), and flowers chased in high relief, called repoussé, appeared on pitchers and tea services (). American silver manufactories were established—Gorham Manufacturing Company in 1831, for instance, and Tiffany & Co. in 1837—as the industry moved from small workshops to larger factories. The Tariff of 1842 imposed a 40 percent duty on many imported goods, including silver, spurring an expansion of American production. With their love of innovation, Americans quickly embraced new technologies and modern factory practices. Presentation silver celebrated such technological achievements as the development of the telegraph (). Following the Civil War, the country’s economy burgeoned as well, increasing the demand for elaborate dining, drinking, and personal silver. It was a period of rampant eclecticism, reflected by styles such as Naturalism, japonisme (); (), Persian (), Renaissance Revival, Beaux-Arts, and Viking Revival. The role of the designer became more central, coincident with the greater division of factory labor. Tiffany’s design department was directed by a succession of skilled and influential artists, including John C. Moore, Edward C. Moore, John T. Curran, and Paulding Farnham. Sometimes design competitions were held, as in the case of the vase presented to William Cullen Bryant on the occasion of his eightieth birthday (). International expositions and fairs also inspired creative designers and manufactories, who submitted their finest achievements for public display and recognition. At the Chicago World’s Columbian Exposition in 1893, Tiffany & Co. exhibited such magnificent objects as the Museum’s Magnolia Vase () and Viking Revival punch bowl (). The jewel-studded Adams Vase () was exhibited in Paris at the 1900 Exposition Universelle.

Around the turn of the twentieth century, a new wave of interest in handcraftsmanship swayed European and American designers, tired perhaps of ornamental excess and production-line technology. This trend influenced not only individual artists, but also firms such as Gorham, which developed a new line of handwrought silver called Martelé, meaning “hammered” in French. The undulating, sensuous lines of Martelé () reflect the Art Nouveau style developed in Europe during the 1880s. Art Nouveau, which was at once revivalist and forward-looking, held sway until the 1910s, when changes in the economic, social, and political climate of the country caused the artistic pendulum to swing once again.


Contributors

Beth Carver Wees
Department of American Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2004


Further Reading

Venable, Charles L. Silver in America, 1840–1940: A Century of Splendor. Exhibition catalogue. Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1995.


Citation

View Citations

Wees, Beth Carver. “Nineteenth-Century American Silver.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/aslv/hd_aslv.htm (October 2004)