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Date: Fri 24-Apr-1998

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Date: Fri 24-Apr-1998

Publication: Ant

Author: JUDIR

Quick Words:

Hadley-Whitney

Full Text:

19TH Century Silver at the Hadley Whitney Museum

w/4cuts

LEXINGTON, KY -- Henry Clay, who twice came in second in elections for the

Presidency, is associated with the silver in Lexington again. A tea service he

purportedly commissioned is displayed at the Headley-Whitney Museum through

May 17.

It is one of 75 hollowware and flatware objects that form the exhibit "At Your

Service: Silver in 19th Century American Life" from the Cincinnati Art

Museum's silver collection.

Although the tea set commissioned by Henry Clay is a favorite with

Kentuckians, this exhibition is primarily concerned with the social practices

that dictated changes in style and the type of silver products in demand. The

exhibit also chronicles the history of tea and coffee uses in this country and

the effect of this use on silver manufacturing and the changes in the silver

industry from craftsmanship to mass production.

The collection includes a variety of distinctive hollowware and flatware types

including tea services, candlesticks, fish servers and flasks that are

distinguished as representative of stylistic trends, examples of works by fine

silversmiths, and objects of historical significance.

The objects represent most of the major stylistic trends of the

NineteenthCentury: American Federal, Neoclassical, Renaissance and Rococo

Revival and American Art Nouveau.

The collection contains examples of many of the century's finest silversmiths

(William Heyer of New York and Charles Burnett of Virginia) and silver

manufacturers (Duhme & Company of Cincinnati, Jacobi & Jenkins of Baltimore,

Gorham & Company of Providence, R.I., and Tiffany & Company of New York). In

addition to the set commissioned by Clay, works with particular historical

significance include tea services produced by the politician Thomas

Worthington.

The museum is at 4435 Old Frankfort Pike. Hours are from 10 am to 5 pm Tuesday

through Friday and noon to 5 pm Saturday and Sunday. Telephone 606/255-6653.

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