Details

Title

Knifebox

Artist/Maker

William Whitehead (American, New York, active 1790-1810), maker

Date

ca. 1794–1799

Medium

Mahogany, poplar, and light wood inlay

Dimensions

15 3/4 x 22 x 9 inches

Credit

Purchase with funds from a supporter of the Museum

Accession #

76.1000.5 C

On View

On View - Stent Family Wing, Level 3, Gallery 305

Sideboards such as this example from New York were designed to hold every accessory needed for a meal, even a chamber pot for guests to use during long dinners. When dinner was not being served, matching boxes—the examples here are rare survivors of the era—held silverware and knives. Such specialized furnishings were made for prosperous merchants, who began to require rooms each fitted to a single purpose; the dining room was the first such devoted space at the end of the 1700s.

More from this Artist

Browse Related Artwork

EP-451 Pendant

Earl Pardon

Three-legged stool

Ethiopian Artist

Tunic

Bandi Artist, Liberia

Pitcher

R & W Wilson

Tankard

Meissen Porcelain Manufactory

Mask

Turka Artist, Ivory Coast

EP-1208 Brooch

Earl Pardon

Composite Group

Kongo Artist, Yombe Region, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Republic of the Congo, or Angola

Feather stool

Shiro Kuramata

Container

Richard Mafong