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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 539

A Pair of Highly Important American Silver Rimmonim

Auction 01.06.1999
01.06.1999
Schätzpreis
200.000 NLG - 300.000 NLG
ca. 94.182 $ - 141.273 $
Zuschlagspreis:
819.140 NLG
ca. 385.742 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 539

A Pair of Highly Important American Silver Rimmonim

Auction 01.06.1999
01.06.1999
Schätzpreis
200.000 NLG - 300.000 NLG
ca. 94.182 $ - 141.273 $
Zuschlagspreis:
819.140 NLG
ca. 385.742 $
Beschreibung:

A Pair of Highly Important American Silver Rimmonim Maker's Mark of Zalmon Bostwick, New York, circa 1850 Each on a circular base raised with six floral lobes. The cylindrical stem decorated ensuite surmounted by six balls supporting the fruit-shaped body with six heartshaped lobes decorated with foliate flowers and with applied floral scrolls with brackets for originally twelve gilt bells, some missing, the similarly decorated and shaped crown top with six bells is resting on six plain balls and surmounted by a beaded bud finial on a plain dome. 37.5cm. (14 3/4in.) high 1354gr. The Bostwick Torah finials of ca. 1850 are almost certainly the only fully-marked American Rimmonim extant from the 19th century. As such, they represent an extremely rare, perhaps unique, commission in the early history of American Judaica. Prior to the late 19th century, American Jews relied almost exclusively on European makers for their ceremonial objects. A significant departure from this practice occured in the late 18th century, when the famous Jewish silversmith Myer Myers (NYC, 1723-1797) crafted the first examples of American Judaica. Among his surviving works are five magnificent pairs of Torah finials, produced for synagogues in New York City, Philadelphia and Newport, Rhode Island. Myers' truly exceptional pieces, however, did not initiate a new taste for American-made finials. The continuous history of American Rimmonim in particular, and American Judaica in general, did not begin until the late 19th early 20th-century. Zalmon Bostwick's Torah finials, crafted in New York City, ca. 1850, bridge this startling gap of more than one hundred years. Quite likely as rare in their own day as they are in ours, they reflect both the past and future of 19th-century American Rimmonim: while their formal details hearken back to Myer Myers' famous 18th-century examples, their mere existence anticipates the emergence, by the century's end, of American-manufactured Judaica. Interestingly enough, unlike these latter works, which often bore "false Russian hallmarks to make them acceptable to the new immigrants from Eastern Europe" (Grafman, Crowning Glory , 37f), the fully-marked Bostwick Rimmonim make no effort to conceal their local provenance from the rapidly-expanding New York Jewish community. The early to mid-19th century marked an exceptional period in the history of New York Jewry. As immigration soared and new freedoms were granted, the number of congregations in New York City increased exponentially. The city's first synagogue, Shearith Israel, lost its singular position in 1825 with the founding of the Bnai Jeshurun Congregation. Numerous congregations followed in rapid succession: Anshe Chesed (1828), Shaarey Zedek (1839), Shaarey Hashamayim (1839), Rodeph Shalom (1842), Temple Emanu-El (1845), Bnai Israel (1847) and Shaarey Brocho (1851). It is precisely during this period of unprecedented congregational multiplication and synagogue construction that Zalmon Bostwick was commissioned to craft a pair of Torah finials. While most of these new congregations (or their benefactors) looked abroad to adorn their new establishments, one seemingly turned to Lower Manhattan, where, according to his advertisement in the New York mercantile Register of 1848-1849 , Zalmon Bostwick was making silver "in the best style ... surpassed by none in standard nor weight". In addition to proclaiming the excellent quality of his craftsmanship and materials, Bostwick's advertisement announced that he had "made extensive preparation for the manufacture of Silver Ware, in all its branches [italics added]." Relatively few examples of his craftsmanship survive today. Two pitcher and goblet sets of 1845 in the Brooklyn Museum and the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, however, attest not only to Bostwick's consummate skill but also to his creative adaptation of models. Both of these qualities are similarly apparent in his Torah finials, the only recorded Judaica objects

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 539
Auktion:
Datum:
01.06.1999
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
Amsterdam
Beschreibung:

A Pair of Highly Important American Silver Rimmonim Maker's Mark of Zalmon Bostwick, New York, circa 1850 Each on a circular base raised with six floral lobes. The cylindrical stem decorated ensuite surmounted by six balls supporting the fruit-shaped body with six heartshaped lobes decorated with foliate flowers and with applied floral scrolls with brackets for originally twelve gilt bells, some missing, the similarly decorated and shaped crown top with six bells is resting on six plain balls and surmounted by a beaded bud finial on a plain dome. 37.5cm. (14 3/4in.) high 1354gr. The Bostwick Torah finials of ca. 1850 are almost certainly the only fully-marked American Rimmonim extant from the 19th century. As such, they represent an extremely rare, perhaps unique, commission in the early history of American Judaica. Prior to the late 19th century, American Jews relied almost exclusively on European makers for their ceremonial objects. A significant departure from this practice occured in the late 18th century, when the famous Jewish silversmith Myer Myers (NYC, 1723-1797) crafted the first examples of American Judaica. Among his surviving works are five magnificent pairs of Torah finials, produced for synagogues in New York City, Philadelphia and Newport, Rhode Island. Myers' truly exceptional pieces, however, did not initiate a new taste for American-made finials. The continuous history of American Rimmonim in particular, and American Judaica in general, did not begin until the late 19th early 20th-century. Zalmon Bostwick's Torah finials, crafted in New York City, ca. 1850, bridge this startling gap of more than one hundred years. Quite likely as rare in their own day as they are in ours, they reflect both the past and future of 19th-century American Rimmonim: while their formal details hearken back to Myer Myers' famous 18th-century examples, their mere existence anticipates the emergence, by the century's end, of American-manufactured Judaica. Interestingly enough, unlike these latter works, which often bore "false Russian hallmarks to make them acceptable to the new immigrants from Eastern Europe" (Grafman, Crowning Glory , 37f), the fully-marked Bostwick Rimmonim make no effort to conceal their local provenance from the rapidly-expanding New York Jewish community. The early to mid-19th century marked an exceptional period in the history of New York Jewry. As immigration soared and new freedoms were granted, the number of congregations in New York City increased exponentially. The city's first synagogue, Shearith Israel, lost its singular position in 1825 with the founding of the Bnai Jeshurun Congregation. Numerous congregations followed in rapid succession: Anshe Chesed (1828), Shaarey Zedek (1839), Shaarey Hashamayim (1839), Rodeph Shalom (1842), Temple Emanu-El (1845), Bnai Israel (1847) and Shaarey Brocho (1851). It is precisely during this period of unprecedented congregational multiplication and synagogue construction that Zalmon Bostwick was commissioned to craft a pair of Torah finials. While most of these new congregations (or their benefactors) looked abroad to adorn their new establishments, one seemingly turned to Lower Manhattan, where, according to his advertisement in the New York mercantile Register of 1848-1849 , Zalmon Bostwick was making silver "in the best style ... surpassed by none in standard nor weight". In addition to proclaiming the excellent quality of his craftsmanship and materials, Bostwick's advertisement announced that he had "made extensive preparation for the manufacture of Silver Ware, in all its branches [italics added]." Relatively few examples of his craftsmanship survive today. Two pitcher and goblet sets of 1845 in the Brooklyn Museum and the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, however, attest not only to Bostwick's consummate skill but also to his creative adaptation of models. Both of these qualities are similarly apparent in his Torah finials, the only recorded Judaica objects

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 539
Auktion:
Datum:
01.06.1999
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
Amsterdam
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