Pitcher

William C. Codman, Designer Gorham Manufacturing Co., Manufacturer

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About the Artwork

Codman was chief designer of Gorham Manufacturing Company from 1891 until his retirement in 1914. In 1896, the company introduced his revolutionary new program to produce a line of handmade silver, called Martelé (hand-hammered) in the Arts and Crafts tradition. Codman said that the new work was to be “modern art,” and the modern art of 1900 was art nouveau. Thus, he parted company with most of the other American makers of Arts and Crafts silverware. Pieces signed by Codman are rare, though we know he personally designed the entire Martelé line. This voluptuous pitcher, with leaf and undulating lily-of-the-valley motifs, is one of the most important manifestations of art nouveau in America.

Pitcher

1912

William C. Codman (Designer) American, 1839 - 1921 Gorham Manufacturing Co. (Manufacturer) American, established 1831

Silver-martele, hammered and chased

Overall: 10 3/4 × 8 × 5 1/8 inches (27.3 × 20.3 × 13 cm)

Silver

American Art before 1950

Founders Society Purchase, Mrs. Charles Theron Van Dusen Fund and American Art General Fund

1991.134

Copyright not assessed, please contact [email protected].

Markings

Signed: W.C. Codman

Engraved, bottom: W. C. Codman

Marks, on bottom: Martele | [eagle] | [a lion], [anchor], G | .9584 | BVQ | GROGAN COMPANY

Provenance

1991-present, purchase by the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

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Exhibition History

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Published References

"American Decorative Arts Acquisitions 1985-2005." Bulletin of the DIA, 81, 1-2 (2007): p. 75.

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Catalogue Raisoneé

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Credit Line for Reproduction

William C. Codman; Gorham Manufacturing Co., Pitcher, 1912, silver-martele, hammered and chased. Detroit Institute of Arts, Founders Society Purchase, Mrs. Charles Theron Van Dusen Fund and American Art General Fund, 1991.134.

Pitcher
Pitcher