Coffee or Chocolate Pot
CultureEnglish
Dateca. 1750
MediumStoneware with salt glaze and enamel
DimensionsOverall: 6 1/4 inches (15.88 cm)
Credit LineGift of Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Burnap
Object number41-23/732 A,B
On View
On viewGallery Location
- 112
Collections
Exhibition HistoryExhibition of Early English Earthenware, Burlington Fine Arts Club, London, 1914, no. 22.
Chinoiserie: The Chinese
Influence, Taft Museum, Cincinnati, OH, October 5-December 2, 1979.
With the first coffee house opening in London in 1652 and the first chocolate house in 1657, England began to enjoy these two exotic beverages. An Arab monopoly on coffee had kept the prices high until the Dutch East India Company began importation early in the 17th century, while Spain kept a monopoly on chocolate brought from the New World. Even though they had become more plentiful and accessible, both remained costly beverages of the upper and middle classes. The English added milk and sugar to both beverages and drank them hot. Vessels for the beverages were made in a variety of ceramic types with the spouts of chocolate pots being shorter, straight and often without an interior filter, as the consumer drank the ground chocolate. Frequently chocolate pot handles are at a right angle to the spout, but this can be true of coffee pots as well.
Mr. Frank P. (1861-1957) and Mrs. Harriet C. (1866-1947) Burnap, Kansas City, MO, by 1941;
Their gift to The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, 1941.
Exhibition of Early English Earthenware, exh. cat. (London: Burlington Fine Arts Club, 1914), 123, unpaginated (repro.).
Ross E. Taggart, The Frank P. and Harriet C. Burnap Collection of English pottery in the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery, (Kansas City, MO: Nelson Gallery and Atkins Museum, 1967), 78 (repro.).
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