AN AMERICAN SILVER ICE BOWL AND MATCHING SPOON
AN AMERICAN SILVER ICE BOWL AND MATCHING SPOON
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PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED AMERICAN COLLECTION
AN AMERICAN SILVER ICE BOWL AND MATCHING SPOON

MARK OF GORHAM MFG. CO., PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, 1870

Details
AN AMERICAN SILVER ICE BOWL AND MATCHING SPOON
MARK OF GORHAM MFG. CO., PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, 1870
Of oval form, chased as a craggy iceberg and applied with suspended icicles, the ends mounted with polar bears, the pierced spoon spear form, the handle wrapped with rope and applied with a polar bear at terminal, marked on underside, numbered 125, and with date letter for 1870
11 in. (28 cm.) long
32 oz. 12 dwt. (1,013.9 gr.)
Provenance
The Property of a New Jersey Family; Christie's, New York, 21 May 2013, lot 65.
Literature
E. Williams, ed., Gorham Silver: Designing Brilliance, 1850-1970, New York, 2019, p. 123 (one of this model).

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Lot Essay

Gorham ice bowl no. 125 was first introduced on 15 April, 1870 with a manufacturing cost of $81.96. Gorham made several different ice bowls; however, this model was the most popular and best-selling.

The iconography of the present ice bowl relates to the 1867 purchase of Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million, or about two cents per acre, by Secretary of State William H. Seward under President Andrew Johnson. Originally ridiculed by Congress and the press, the new Territory of Alaska was dubbed as Seward’s “ice box” and President Johnson’s “polar bear garden.” Also at this time, the Bostonian Frederic Tudor (1783-1864) developed the technology to harvest, market, and sell ice to an affluent client base. Therefore, as a luxury good in the late 19th century, silver ice bowls such as this one, decorated with motifs of icebergs and polar bears possibly referring to the contemporary nicknames for the Territory of Alaska, reflected its value and prestige. (See Samuel J. Hough, "The Class of 1870: Gorham Sterling Ice Bowls," Silver Magazine, September-October 1989, pp. 30-33).

Identical examples of 1870 Gorham Ice Bowls were sold at Christie's, New York, 17-18 January 2019, lot 828, and 20-21 January 2022, lot 279.

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