Cup

Description

Boston goldsmith and jeweler Benjamin Pierpont made this cup—part of a set of four identical vessels—that was given by Deacon Obadiah Dickinson (1704–1788) to the Church of Christ in Hatfield, Massachusetts. Dickinson was prominent in church and local affairs and also possessed extensive land holdings in the area. Puritan theology dominated the region, and the simple form of the cup along with the use of silver was symbolic of purity. The two handles on the vessel allowed the cup to be easily passed among the congregation’s communicants.

Provenance

Deacon Obediah Dickenson (1704-1788); given to the First Congregational Church, Hatfield, MA. Francis P. Garvan (1875-1937), New York; The Mabel Brady Garvan Collection, Yale University, New Haven, CT by 1948; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago in 1948.

Cup

Benjamin Pierpont

1788

Accession Number

62542

Medium

Silver

Dimensions

14.6 × 7 × 9.5 cm (5 3/4 × 7 × 3 3/4 in.)

Classification

drinking vessel

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of the Antiquarian Society through the Mrs. Edwin A. Seipp Fund