Salver

Description

Salvers were normally small and used to support a tea or coffeepot on a table. The large size of this salver suggests it was used as a serving platter. The heavy ball-and-claw feet and the border, an alternating series of convex and concave elements known as gadrooning, were typical decorative treatments favored in New York at the end of the 18th century. The salver was originally commissioned by Matthew Clarkson (1758–1825).

Provenance

Probably Matthew Clarkson (1733-1772) or possibly David Matthew Clarkson (1758-1825), New York; by descent to Pauline Rives Clarkson Miller (1856-1932); given to her son Christopher Blackburn Miller (1885-1957), by 1947; sold, Miller Auction, Yonkers, NY, April 1947, to James Graham and Sons, New York; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1951.

Salver

William Grigg

1766–80

Accession Number

74775

Medium

Silver

Dimensions

4.1 × 39.1 × 39.1 cm (1 5/8 × 15 3/8 × 15 3/8 in.)

Classification

vessel for serving food

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