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Coat rack
Hall stand
Coat rack
Jonathan Moore (American)
about 1860–80
Object Place: New York, New York, United States
Medium/Technique
Cast iron and mirror glass
Dimensions
Overall: 210.8 x 101.6 x 35.6 cm (83 x 40 x 14 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Miss Aimée and Miss Rosamond Lamb
Accession Number1975.742
CollectionsAmericas
ClassificationsFurniture – Tables, stands, screens
This coat rack reveals the decorative possibilities of an industrial material. Cast iron had been used for centuries in tools and cooking utensils. But in the eighteenth century, technological improvements allowed for a smoother, more liquid molten iron that could be cast in intricate molds. Iron became cheaper, stronger, and more resilient, finding its way into everything from railroad bridges and architectural façades to parlor stoves, garden ornaments, and furniture.
DescriptionOval mirror in center, topped by basket of flowers decoration. Shallow trough at base and scrolled arms above to accomodate umbrellas. Coat huooks are attached under central oval mirror and on four spreading arms flanking and above mirror. Elaborate rococo decoration throughout includes human and animal faces, caryatid figures, scrolls, and leafage.
Marks
On back: "Jonn. Moore / N-Y" [second "n" in Jonn. is superscript]
ProvenanceFrom the collection of Miss Aimée and Miss Rosamond Lamb, Boston, Mass.