Timepiece

Description

Elnathan Taber apprenticed with a member of the Willard family clockmakers of Roxbury, who dominated the clock-making industry at the turn of the 18th century. In 1801 Simon Willard patented a timepiece that hung on the wall and featured an eight-day movement with pendulum and a weight. This wall clock is also known as a banjo clock because of its shape. The painter of the glass panels is unknown but shows an unusual sophistication and subject matter. Classically-inspired themes such as these figures with a temple in the background allude to the early American republic’s self-conscious affinity with the power and democratic values of the earlier Roman republic. The timepiece was originally owned by Edward Toppan of Boston and Newburyport.

Provenance

Edward Tappan, Boston and Newburyport, MA. With Peter Sawyer Antiques, Exeter, NH, by 1995 [incoming receipt, RX21008, Dec. 1, 1995; copy in curatorial object file]; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1996.

Timepiece

Elnathan Taber

1802–5

Accession Number

144345

Medium

Gilt mahogany and white pine, painted glass, gesso, iron, steel, and brass

Dimensions

H.: 109.2 cm (43 in.)

Classification

furniture accessory

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Purchased with funds provided by Dorothy J. Vance