Chafing Dish

Description

Chafing dishes were common in the colonies and closely resemble their English counterparts. The interior plate held hot coals, and the chafing dish was probably fitted with a small tray that rested on the scroll supports and supported a kettle or pot. The decorative pierced work around the rim of the dish allowed the heat of the coals to warm the tray. The hoof foot is typical of New England chafing dishes of the period.

Provenance

Possibly Jonathan and Miriam Mason (m. 1747), Boston; William Phillips (1737-1772) and Margaret Wendell Phillips (1739-1823); by descent to their son, John Phillips; by descent to John C. Phillips, Cambridge, MA, 1915. With James Graham and Sons, New York, by 1952; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1952.

Chafing Dish

John Burt

c. 1730

Accession Number

78611

Medium

Silver and wood

Dimensions

10.2 × 15.2 × 30.5 cm (4 3/8 × 6 7/8 × 12 1/8 in.)

Classification

dish (vessel)

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Purchased with funds provided by the Antiquarian Society through the Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Seipp Fund