Arthur Stone Sterling Silver 'Woolsey' Compotes - 4, Gardner, MA c. 1920
These lovely compotes have shaped bowls with six sections divided by ribs with applied molded bands around the rims.
The spreading feet, with central 'knop' decoration, have molded edges which complement the rims.
Stone ran one of the most important arts & crafts shops in the country. Items were hand made using traditional
silversmithing techniques. An innovator, Stone let the other masters who worked for him sign the items they made. These compotes were raised by Herbert Taylor, Stone's
'right hand man' and possibly the most accomplished silversmith who worked for Stone. Taylor was one of only eight silversmiths to win the award of 'Medalist', the highest
honor for craft bestowed by the Society of Arts & Crafts, Boston.
Theodore S. Woolsey was a Yale professor and connoisseur who gave Stone an English silver bowl that inspired this
design. Stone's shop referred to this elegant style as 'Woolsey' when used in bowls and dishes. (See Elenita Chickering, Arthur J. Stone 1847-1938 Designer and Silversmith, p. 163.)
Marked with Stone's trademark, 'Sterling' and 'T' for Herbert Taylor, these sterling silver compotes measure 3
.625 inches high and 7.125 inches in diameter. They weigh 12.4 troy ounces each, have never been monogrammed and are in excellent antique condition.
Provenance:
Hugh J. Grant, Sr. (1858-1910) was the first Irish-American mayor of New York City, serving from 1889-1892. At the
age of 31, he was also the youngest mayor in that city's history. Grant married Julia M. Murphy (1872-1944), the daughter of New York Senator Edward Murphy, Jr. (1836
-1911), in 1895.
A successful real estate investor, Grant lived with his family in their 10,960 square foot mansion at 20 East 72nd Street
that was designed by the architectural firm of Rose and Stone. They purchased many of the finest decorative arts then available - including the exceptional Gorham Martelé
ewer and basin now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The Grants were important philanthropists and major donors to the Catholic Church, providing the funds to
establish Regis High School (a Jesuit school for the poor and gifted), in New York. The Grants fully funded the school
until the 1960's. Hugh J. Grant, Jr. gifted their 72nd Street mansion to the Archdiocese of New York. It is currently the
residence of the Vatican's ambassador to the United Nations and serves as the Pope's residence when visiting New York City.
These would have probably been owned by his wife Julia.
Our Price: SOLD
Item code: F921
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