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tumbler

Object NameTumbler with Portrait of Jackson
Made FromGlass
Date1824
Place MadeUnited States, PA, Pittsburgh
TechniqueFree blown, cut, encased cameo
SizeOverall H: 8.4 cm; Rim Diam: 7.3 cm
Accession Number55.4.273
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
East Side Winter Antiques Show
Pittsburgh Glass
Heads of State
Masterpieces of American Glass
Glassmaking: America's First Industry
On ViewAmerican Gallery
Interpretive Notes
Christian Gobrecht brought the manufacture of the enclosed ceramic portrait to this country from France. He was employed by the Bakewell firm to make the portraits. Samples were presented to Andrew Jackson and Dewitt Clinton, who had just pressed for the construction of the Erie Canal. During that year, Lafayette made his triumphal tour of the United States and visited the Bakewell glasshouse. No record survives to indicate whether he was presented with a tumbler with his portrait.
Physical DescriptionTumbler with Portrait of Jackson. Clear glass; wear marks; free blown and cut, with an encased white cameo incrustation; cylindrical body; a frieze of diamonds and fans above the paneled lower body, in the base a portrait bust of Andrew Jackson ("sulphide").
Provenance
Source McKearin Antiques - 1955-11-12

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