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Candlestick (one of a pair)

John Noyes (American, 1674–1749)
1695–1700
Object Place: Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Medium/Technique Silver
Dimensions Overall: 16.2 x 23.5 cm (6 3/8 x 9 1/4 in.)
Credit Line Gift of Miss Clara Bowdoin Winthrop
Accession Number54.595
CollectionsAmericas
ClassificationsSilver hollowware
Candlesticks are rare in seventeenth-century American silver; only an earlier pair made about 1685 by Jeremiah Dummer and this pair by John Noyes-a skilled craftsman who is thought to have apprenticed with Dummer-are known to survive. Noyes completed his training in 1695 or 1696 and fashioned these hollow columnar candlesticks shortly thereafter for Pierre Baudouin (anglicized to Bowdoin), a Huguenot who immigrated to Casco Bay in Maine in 1687 and then settled in Boston, where he died in 1706. They descended in the Bowdoin family until presented to the Museum in 1954. One of the candlesticks' eighteenth-century owners was James Bowdoin, for whom Bowdoin College in Maine is named.
The general form of these architectonic candlesticks was popular in English, French, and Dutch silver, brass, pewter, and ceramics in the second half of the seventeenth century. Like the Dummer salt (see 32.371), the Noyes candlesticks are in keeping with the latest London styles; they exemplify the best in the early Baroque mode, as light reflects and recedes off the small convex moldings on the base, flange, and removable bobeche (candle socket) of each stick, giving life to the surface and achieving the light and dark contrasts that are such an important part of this aesthetic.

This text was adapted from Ward, et al., MFA Highlights: American Decorative Arts & Sculpture (Boston, 2006) available at www.mfashop.com/mfa-publications.html.

Catalogue Raisonné Buhler, 1972, No. 90
DescriptionCut-cornered square moulded base with band of reeding; spiral reeding at base of stick; hollow moulded and reeded flange; fluted column, with stopped reeding and collar, with incised line, at flange. Moulded rim . Bobeche in outline of base with a very deep bezel of two sheets moulded beneath and circle of spiral reeding on top. Mark on side away from crest on edge. cork in bottom of stopped bezel. Flange opening at outer edge. Top and flange bent.
Provenance1695/1700, Pierre Baudouin, later Peter Bowdoin (b. 1640 - d. 1706), Boston; to his son, James Bowdoin (b. 1676 - d. 1747); to his son, Gov. James Bowdoin (b. 1725 - d. 1790); to his daughter, Elizabeth M. Bowdoin (b. 1750 - d. 1809) and her husband, John Temple (b. 1732 - d. 1798); to their daughter, Elizabeth Bowdoin Temple (b. 1769 - d. 1825) and her husband, Thomas Lindall Winthrop (b. 1760 - d. 1841); to their son, Robert Charles Winthrop (b. 1809 - d. 1894); to his son, Robert Charles Winthrop, Jr. (b. 1834 - d. 1905); to his daughter, Clara Bowdoin Winthrop (b. 1876 - d. 1969), Boston; 1954, gift of Clara Bowdoin Winthrop to the MFA. (Accession Date: May 13, 1954)