2005.51.3, Lebolt & Co., Tea or coffee service, teapot or coffeepot, c. 1915
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
This tea or coffeepot is part of an elegantly refined tea service. With its subtly hammered panels, the tea service ranks among the finest examples of American silver in the Arts & Crafts aesthetic.
2005.51.4, Lebolt & Co., Tea or coffee service, creamer, c. 1915
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
This creamer is part of an elegantly refined tea service. With its subtly hammered panels, the tea service ranks among the finest examples of American silver in the Arts & Crafts aesthetic.
2005.51.1, Lebolt & Co., Tea or coffee service, tray, c. 1915
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
This tray is part of an elegantly refined tea service. With its subtly hammered panels, the tea service ranks among the finest examples of American silver in the Arts & Crafts aesthetic.
2005.51.5.A-B, Lebolt & Co., Tea or coffee service, sugar bowl, c. 1915
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
This creamer is part of an elegantly refined tea service. With its subtly hammered panels, the tea service ranks among the finest examples of American silver in the Arts & Crafts aesthetic.
William Wordsworth, "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" (commonly known as "Daffodils"), 1804-1807.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Widely cited as the most famous poem in the English language, William Wordsworth's "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud," is the likely source for the title of Charles Webster Hawthorne's A Golden Host of Daffodils.
William Wordsworth, "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" (commonly known as "Daffodils"), originally published in 1807
Founding Mothers in Southeast Moluccan Art
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The most impressive statues of founding mothers were found in the western part of Maluku Tenggara. On islands such as Luang, Sermata, Leti, Lakor, and Kisar, so-called luli (a word meaning “sacred”) represented the female founders of noble matrilineal families.
Founding Fathers in Southeast Moluccan Art
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
On Aru, Kai, and Tanimbar, the history of many patrilineal descent groups goes back to a glorious, mythical past in which the first male ancestors still acted in the guise of animals. The mythical founding fathers appear to have assumed the shape of animals on Aru in particular.