2007.65 After Charles Robert Ashbee, Two-handled dish


GENERAL DESCRIPTION    
The overall form of this dramatic dish, with its elongated handles capped by jade cabochons, is remarkably similar to a porringer designed by British Arts & Crafts designer Charles Robert Ashbee for the Guild of Handicraft (2009.54.1). This design was produced by the Guild around 1900, but American silver producers would have been familiar with the publication of Ashbee’s designs as early as 1894, as well as with his four subsequent lecture trips in the United States. While British metalwork influenced a number of American Arts & Crafts enterprises, including notable silver studios such as the Kalo Shop in Chicago and the Handicraft Shop near Boston, few other objects of the era are as clearly drawn from British sources as this work.  

Adapted from
Kevin Tucker, DMA unpublished material, Label copy. 

NOTES
I updated Provenance in TMS.
HAB updated geo x ref, removed TMS pending tag, 10/3/2017

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RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE
Until 2008: Spencer Marks, Ltd. (Mark F. McHugh and Spencer Gordon, III), Southampton, Masschusetts [1]

From 2008: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from the above [1]

[1] See Spencer Marks, Ltd. invoice (dated September 20, 2007, in Collections Records Object File) and Dallas Museum of Art check (dated January 25, 2008, copy in Collections Records Object File). 

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Apply to objects where number equals 2007.65

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General Description
   
The overall form of this dramatic dish, with its elongated handles capped by jade cabochons, is remarkably similar to a porringer designed by British Arts & Crafts designer Charles Robert Ashbee for the Guild of Handicraft (2009.54.1). This design was produced by the Guild around 1900, but American silver producers would have been familiar with the publication of Ashbee’s designs as early as 1894, as well as with his four subsequent lecture trips in the United States. While British metalwork influenced a number of American Arts & Crafts enterprises, including notable silver studios such as the Kalo Shop in Chicago and the Handicraft Shop near Boston, few other objects of the era are as clearly drawn from British sources as this work.  

Adapted from
Kevin Tucker, DMA unpublished material, Label copy. 

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
I updated Provenance in TMS.
HAB updated geo x ref, removed TMS pending tag, 10/3/2017

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE
Until 2008: Spencer Marks, Ltd. (Mark F. McHugh and Spencer Gordon, III), Southampton, Masschusetts [1]

From 2008: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from the above [1]

[1] See Spencer Marks, Ltd. invoice (dated September 20, 2007, in Collections Records Object File) and Dallas Museum of Art check (dated January 25, 2008, copy in Collections Records Object File). 

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CONTEXTUAL
rules
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Objects
number
Equals
2007.65
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
*Decorative Arts and Design
silver (metal): AAT: 300011029
London (England): TGN: 7011781
@Robinson
jade (rock): AAT: 300011119
semiprecious stone: AAT: 300011175
Arts and Crafts (movement): AAT: 300266319
Art Nouveau: AAT: 300021430
Ashbee_Charles Robert: ULAN: 500030367
Chipping Campden: TGN: 7011154
cabochons (design motifs): AAT: 300010254
porringers (dishes): AAT: 300042964
source file
object_notes_4_b-0009.xml.nores