Exhibition Guide
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Art Object Info
Majestic yet simple, this tray tells multiple tales. First is the story of skillful craftsmanship: Baltimore silversmith Thomas Warner hammered his largest known piece from a single silver ingot. He then added cast and applied elements.
Warner made the tray for Thomas Hollingsworth (1747–1815), a successful Baltimore merchant. Hollingsworth’s name is engraved on the back, but the initials JBM with a lion rampant decorate the front. Why? Hollingsworth’s daughter Ann married John Boucher Morris in 1817. Sometime thereafter, Hollingsworth’s initials were erased and changed to Morris’. The back records four generations named “John B. Morris,” so we can’t say who—father, son, grandson, or great-grandson—made the change.
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Art Object Info
Majestic yet simple, this tray tells multiple tales. First is the story of skillful craftsmanship: Baltimore silversmith Thomas Warner hammered his largest known piece from a single silver ingot. He then added cast and applied elements.
Warner made the tray for Thomas Hollingsworth (1747–1815), a successful Baltimore merchant. Hollingsworth’s name is engraved on the back, but the initials JBM with a lion rampant decorate the front. Why? Hollingsworth’s daughter Ann married John Boucher Morris in 1817. Sometime thereafter, Hollingsworth’s initials were erased and changed to Morris’. The back records four generations named “John B. Morris,” so we can’t say who—father, son, grandson, or great-grandson—made the change.