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Public Domain

Samuel Kirk

“Gilmor” Pitcher

1834-1842

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Samuel Kirk

“Gilmor” Pitcher

1834-1842

Physical Qualities Sterling silver, 16 7/8 x 10 3/16 x 6 1/2 in. (42.9 x 25.9 x 16.5 cm)
Credit Line Purchased as the gift of the Young Friends of the American Wing, in Honor of Catherine Stewart Thomas, Assistant Curator of Decorative Arts, 1997-2005
Object Number 2005.34
19th-century American silver can be hard to date, but this regal Renaissance Revival water pitcher, marked by leading Baltimore silversmith Samuel Kirk, also bears the mark “F,” indicating that it was assayed by the City of Baltimore sometime between 1835 and 1843. Testifying to an ongoing conversation between European classical ornament and American art, the pitcher features a hand-hammered body joined to a cast handle. Distinctive raised ornament – a technique so often associated with Baltimore silver that it bears the nickname “Baltimore repoussé” – imparts a lively richness to the shimmering surface. In a city known for silver manufacture, Samuel Kirk (1793-1872) would rise to dominate the industry. He arrived in Baltimore in 1815, and by the time the BMA’s silver pitcher was made, he had become Maryland’s leading silver maker, enjoying an extensive list of well-heeled clients scattered throughout the United States. By assigning the pattern name “Gilmor” to this pitcher, his appropriated celebrity, associating its silver with Robert Gilmor, Jr., a famous Baltimore collector.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 2005; Spencer Marks, Ltd.; by descent from Douglas Thomas, noted Baltimore architect
"New Acquisition," BMA Today, Winter 2005/2006, p. 11, ill.
Benskin, Elizabeth, and Suzy Wolffe. Teacher's Guide to the American Collection. Baltimore, MD: Baltimore Museum of Art, 2014, pages 33 and 41.

Markings: Multiple marks stamped in bottom: "SAM[small L]KIRK"; "S:K"; "11. OZ"; shield with Dominical "F"

Maker

Samuel Kirk

1792–1871

1793-1872
Meet Samuel Kirk

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