166-piece Dinner Service made for Thomas Willing (1731–1821), Philadelphia statesman and banker

166-piece Dinner Service made for Thomas Willing (1731–1821), Philadelphia statesman and banker

Public Domain

166-piece Dinner Service made for Thomas Willing (1731–1821), Philadelphia statesman and banker
CultureChinese
Titles
  • 166-piece Dinner Service made for Thomas Willing (1731–1821), Philadelphia statesman and banker
Datec. 1800–1810
Made inChina, Asia
MediumHard-paste porcelain with enamel and gilding
DimensionsVariable dimensions for one soup tureen, two vegetable tureens with liners, eight platters, five dishes, two stands for baskets, one compote, one sauce tureen with fixed stand, one sauce ladle, one sugar bowl, one cream jug, four saucer dishes, twelve soup plates, twenty-eight dinner plates, thirty side or dessert plates, nineteen pudding dishes, three sweetmeat dishes, twenty-four saucers, eleven teabowls, and eleven teacups.
Credit LineThe Bayou Bend Collection, museum purchase funded by the Director's Accessions Endowment in honor of the Bayou Bend Docent Organization on the occasion of its 50th anniversary
Object numberB.2011.5.1-.166
Current Location
Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens
Bayou Bend Dining Room
Exposé

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Department
Bayou Bend
Object Type
Description

This large dinner service that was probably a special order by Thomas Willing, one of Philadelphia’s wealthiest men at the time of American Revolution and later an active participant in the China trade. He served in a number of civic offices, including mayor of Philadelphia and as part of Pennsylvania’s delegation to the Continental Congress. He was later named the first president of the Bank of the United States, working closely with Alexander Hamilton as the Treasury Secretary. Decorated with urns and swags, Willing’s dinner service kept pace with the decorative fashions of the federal period.

Throughout the colonial period, Chinese manufacturers made wares specifically designed for Western markets, but it was not until after independence that Americans traded directly with China, and they did so beginning in 1785 as the ship Empress of China returned with its cargo. 


ProvenanceThomas Willing (1731–1821) and Anne McCall (1745–1781), Philadelphia; by descent to Evelyn Eyre Willing Bromley (1914–2000), Philadelphia; Estate of Evelyn Eyre Willing Bromley; purchased by [Philip H. Bradley & Co., Downington, Pennsylvania, 2000]; purchased by private American collection; consigned to [Christie’s, New York, “Chinese Export Art,” January 25, 2011, lot 306]; purchased by [Polly Latham Asian Art, Boston]; purchased by MFAH, 2011.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
[none]
[none]

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

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