Myer Myers American
1770–76
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 750
この稀有なアメリカの食卓用の籠は、ニューヨーク市とノースカロライナ州ニュー・バーンに住み西インド諸島で商いを営んだサミュエル・コーネルと妻のスザンナのために作られました。コーネルはノースカロライナ州議員に任命された記念にニューヨークの著名な銀細工師マイヤー・マイヤーズに数点の銀器の制作を依頼しました。籠の裏面の銘文から、コーネル夫妻がこの籠を、1786年10月19日にハーマン・リロイと結婚した娘のハンナに贈ったことが分かっています。レースのように繊細な穿孔が施されたパネルと丸ひだ飾りの付いた縁、蝶番が付いた透かし細工の取っ手のあるこの籠は、ロンドンの一流の銀器と肩を並べる作品です。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 題:
  • アーティスト: マイヤー・マイヤーズ アメリカ、1723–1795年
  • 月日: 1770–76年
  • 手法:
  • 寸法: 28.4 x 36.7 x 28.9 cm
  • 提供者: モーリス K. ジェサップ基金、1954年
  • 受け入れ番号: 54.167
  • Curatorial Department: The American Wing

Audio

以下でのみ利用可能: English
Cover Image for 4517. Basket

4517. Basket

0:00
0:00

MORRISON HECKSCHER: American-made silver breadbaskets were very rare in the colonies during the eighteenth century. Most were imported from England by the very wealthy. So this is one of only two or three colonial baskets known today.

BETH WEES: And it is really a beauty, I think.

MORRISON HECKSCHER: Curator Beth Wees.

BETH WEES: It is very much in the rococo style. You have a lot of curvilinear forms so that you follow the sort of scrollwork. And it is made to look very airy and lacy by being pierced. Each panel was pierced with a saw, with a little tiny fretsaw.

MORRISON HECKSCHER: With its high-style English roots, this basket reminds us that many Americans looked to London for guidance on fashion.

BETH WEES: As a historian, I once heard said, "Americans wanted political independence, but they didn't want social independence."

MORRISON HECKSCHER: And colonial Americans liked to live an opulent life. Indeed the basket’s original owners had homes in New York and North Carolina. They were the prosperous West Indies merchant Samuel Cornell and his wife Susannah. You can see their monogram – “SSC” – in the center of the basket. These wealthy patrons commissioned several pieces from this same noted silversmith – Myer Myers. The only major Jewish silversmith known today from the colonial period.

More Artwork

Research Resources

The Met provides unparalleled resources for research and welcomes an international community of students and scholars. The Met's Open Access API is where creators and researchers can connect to the The Met collection. Open Access data and public domain images are available for unrestricted commercial and noncommercial use without permission or fee.

To request images under copyright and other restrictions, please use this Image Request form.

Feedback

We continue to research and examine historical and cultural context for objects in The Met collection. If you have comments or questions about this object record, please contact us using the form below. The Museum looks forward to receiving your comments.

Send feedback