Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Electroplating, an electrical means to adhere a thin layer of silver to a base metal, was patented by a Birmingham manufactory in 1840. By the late 1800s, the region was home to many firms specializing in this technique. Christopher Dresser viewed electroplating as a means to produce elegant and modern design at reasonable prices for the middle class. This ladle and the tureen it accompanies are based on simple Buddhist metalwares he observed while in Japan in 1876.
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Harris B. Stanwood — Porringer
Ephraim Brasher — Ladle
John Sutton — Basin
John Owen — Tankard
Gorham Manufacturing Company — Butter Dish
Jones, Ball, and Poor — Chocolate Pot
E. G. Webster and Son — Coffee or Tea Service
Artist unknown — Porringer
Heinrich Hiller, II — Wall Cistern with Spigot
Wilhelm I Breitinger — Wine Can
Augustus F. Otto — Ladle
Wood and Hughes — Ladle