Keystone with Head of Bearded Man, One of Ten, from Park Lane Hotel, 299 Park Avenue, New York City (demolished 1966)

Schultze & Weaver; George A. Fuller Co.

Object Label

These ceramics are decorated with American landscape scenes and were made in England for the American market. Before the 1840s, only the elite could afford dinnerware, then made of expensive porcelain. One of the early fruits of the Industrial Revolution was the production of inexpensive machine-molded and mechanically decorated earthenware for the middle class. These objects were decorated by the transfer technique, in which the scene is engraved on a metal plate, inked, printed on paper, and then pressed, or transferred, onto the ceramic body.

Caption

Schultze & Weaver; George A. Fuller Co.. Keystone with Head of Bearded Man, One of Ten, from Park Lane Hotel, 299 Park Avenue, New York City (demolished 1966), 1924. Limestone, 41 x 22 x 24 in. (104.1 x 55.9 x 61.0 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Frederick Fried through Anonymous Arts Recovery Society, 66.252.6. Creative Commons-BY

Title

Keystone with Head of Bearded Man, One of Ten, from Park Lane Hotel, 299 Park Avenue, New York City (demolished 1966)

Date

1924

Medium

Limestone

Classification

Architectural Element

Dimensions

41 x 22 x 24 in. (104.1 x 55.9 x 61.0 cm)

Credit Line

Gift of Frederick Fried through Anonymous Arts Recovery Society

Accession Number

66.252.6

Rights

Creative Commons-BY

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