2020.195: Punch Strainer
VesselsGallery Text
By the mid-18th century, fashionable colonial entertainment and medicinal cures included a midday or after-supper “punch,” consisting of
water or tea, sugar, lemon and/or orange slices, spices, and spirits, usually rum or whiskey. Silver two-handled strainers with perforated designs cut into the metal with a drill and jeweler’s sawallowed for artistic experimentation. The punch strainer became a fixture of wealthy households for the straining of citrus pulp, seeds, and nutmeg clusters out of the glass.
Identification and Creation
- Object Number
- 2020.195
- People
-
Daniel Parker, American (Charlestown, Massachusetts 1726 - 1785 Boston, Massachusetts)
- Title
- Punch Strainer
- Classification
- Vessels
- Work Type
- vessel
- Date
- c. 1765
- Places
- Creation Place: North America, United States, Massachusetts, Boston
- Culture
- American
- Persistent Link
- https://hvrd.art/o/369964
Location
- Location
-
Level 2, Room 2240, European and American Art, 17th–19th century, The Arts in the Eighteenth–Century Atlantic World
Physical Descriptions
- Medium
- Silver
- Dimensions
-
26.4 cm (10 3/8 in.)
130 g - Inscriptions and Marks
-
- monogram: engraved, under rim: EG
- inscription: scratchweight, under rim: 4-16
- maker's mark: back of handle, stamped: D [pellet] Parker [mark of Daniel Parker]
- maker's mark: back of handle, stamped: D [pellet] Parker [mark of Daniel Parker]
- inscription: under rim, black paint: 1990-34
Provenance
- Recorded Ownership History
- Henry V. Weil (1864-1943), New York. Mrs. J. Armory Haskell (1864-1942), New York, sold [through her estate sale, Parke-Bernet, New York, April 26-29, 1944, lot 586]. May and Howard Joynt, Alexandria, sold [through their sale, Christie's, New York, January 19-20, 1990, lot 277]. John A. Hyman, Williamsburg, 1990, sold [through S. J. Shrubsole, New York]; to Daniel and Susan Pollack, 2008, gift; to Harvard Art Museums, 2020
Acquisition and Rights
- Credit Line
- Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, The Pollack Collection, gift of Daniel A. Pollack AB ’60 and Susan F. Pollack AB ’64
- Accession Year
- 2020
- Object Number
- 2020.195
- Division
- European and American Art
- Contact
- am_europeanamerican@harvard.edu
- Permissions
-
The Harvard Art Museums encourage the use of images found on this website for personal, noncommercial use, including educational and scholarly purposes. To request a higher resolution file of this image, please submit an online request.
Descriptions
- Description
- Bowl pierced in the shape of a flower. Handles with stylized leaves
Publication History
- Important XVIII Century American Furniture...Collected by the Late Mrs. J. Amory Haskell, Part One, auct. cat., Parke-Bernet Galleries, Inc. (New York, April 26-29, 1944), p. 168, lot 586, repr.
- The Collection of May and Howard Joynt, Alexandria, Virginia: Highly Important American Furniture, Silver and Paintings, auct. cat., Christie's, New York (New York, January 19-20, 1990), p. 40, lot no. 277, repr.
- John D. Davis, "Silver Punch Strainers in the John A. Hyman Collection at Colonial Williamsburg", The Magazine Antiques (August 1991), Vol. 140, No. 2, pp. 198-199, no. F [mistakenly identified as D]
- Patricia E. Kane, Colonial Massachusetts Silversmiths and Jewelers: A Biographical Dictionary based on the Notes of Francis Hill Bigelow & John Marshall Phillips, Yale University Press (U.S.) (New Haven, CT, 1998), p. 756
- Jeanne Sloane, Early American Silver in the collection of Daniel A. Pollack, Privately Published (Boston [?], 2019), cat. no. 19, repr.
- "Harvard Art Museums Receive Important Gift of American Silver", Artfixdaily Artwire ([e-journal], March 22, 2022), https://www.artfixdaily.com/artwire/release/6573-harvard-art-museums-receive-important-gift-of-american-silver, accessed March 24, 2022
Exhibition History
- 32Q: 2240 18th Century, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, 09/12/2022 - 01/01/2050
Related Objects
Verification Level
This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. For more information please contact the Division of European and American Art at am_europeanamerican@harvard.edu