Pair of lidded tea caddies
China
1840-1900
Measurements
3-3/4 in x 5-1/2 in x 4 in
Materials
Pewter
Credit Line
Historic Odessa Foundation, The David Wilson Mansion, Inc.
Accession Number
1971.906
Condition Notes
The sides and bottoms have been pushed inward, and some edges are dented and misshapen.
Provenance
Ex coll. Mrs. E. Tatnall (Mary Corbit) Warner
Comments
The tea caddies are made of thin sheets of pewter bent to form and soldered in place. Each rectangular caddy has wide chamfered corners, making the overall into half an octagon. The sides taper towards the base. The tops have a narrow neck that holds a lid inside. It can be removed by an ivory button finial. A pewter cover slides over the neck. The top of each caddy is engraved with several bands (rows of dots, Greek-key scroll, and scrolls) with stylized floral sprays filling the interior of the panels. The covers are also engraved. One cover (.2) features an elderly Chinese man with mountains in the distance. The other (.1) has a stylized flower.
These tea caddies were among many Chinese-made non-porcelain objects traded with the West throughout the 19th century,