DETROIT, MI.- The Detroit Institute of Arts is displaying its important collection of early American silver, which has not been on view for 10 years. The collection, which features work by the famed Boston silversmith and patriot Paul Revere, has been a must-see for generations of Detroit school children.
The collection was relegated to storage in 2002 when the renovation of the museums historic 1927 building led to the closing of the American colonial galleries. Lack of funding for new exhibition cases meant the silver collection had to remain in storage when the museum reopened in 2007. In 2011, the Americana Foundation, based in Novi, Michigan, awarded the DIA a substantial grant for new research on the silver collection and to support construction of new state-of-the-art exhibition cases to house it. The Americana Foundation was established by Adolph H. Meyer and Ginger Meyer. It supports educational and advocacy programs that address the preservation of American agriculture; the conservation of natural resources; and the protection and presentation of material expressions of Americas heritage, with a particular focus on decorative arts from the colonial and early Federal periods.
The new installation includes 59 of the most important examples of early American silver at the DIA and two important late18th-century Chinese export bowls. Highlights of the new installation include:
Tankard (about 1695). A rare drinking vessel made in Boston by Edward Winslow
Sugar Bowl with Cover (about 1755). Made in New York by Myer Myers. Myers was the most important Jewish silversmith active in colonial America. This sugar bowl was donated to the DIA in 1955 by Members of the Jewish Community of Detroit in honor of the American Jewish Tercentenary 16541954.
Sugar Basket (about 1780). Made in Boston by the master silversmith and patriot Paul Revere
Teapot (early 1790s). Made in Boston by the master silversmith and patriot Paul Revere
Punch Bowl (about 1790). Chinese export porcelain, made for the American market, with Masonic markings