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
These salt spoons are part of a vast service made for Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte’s sister Pauline on the occasion of her marriage to the Roman nobleman Camillo Borghese, Sixth Prince of Sulmona. In the years after the French Revolution, architects and designers adopted the visual language of ancient Greece and Rome to express the new imperial order. Napoleon, hoping to promote Paris’s luxury trades, commissioned several silver dinner services as gifts to be sent abroad.
Be the first to share your thoughts.
Sign in to join the discussion.
European, possibly Italian — Knife, Fork and Spoon with Cap
Augsburg, Germany — Fork from a Traveling Set
Augsburg, Germany — Knife from a Traveling Set
Augsburg, Germany — Skewer and Spoon from a Traveling Set
Augsburg, Germany — Leather Case for Traveling Set of Cutler
Augsburg, Germany — Marrow Spoon
Augsburg, Germany — Spice Box
Augsburg, Germany — Spoon
Inca — Spoon with Long-Tailed Puma on Handle
Samuel Kirk & Son (Baltimore, Md.) — Salt Spoon
Manufacture nationale de Sèvres — Sugar Sifter Spoon
Inca — Spoon with Reclining Figure on Handle