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From Forge and Furnace: A Celebration of Early American Iron

Exhibition Info
Fireback 2012-154
From Forge and Furnace: A Celebration of Early American IronNovember 24, 2016 - present

Can iron and art be used in the same sentence? Absolutely! This hard, often black or gray metal was used to make everything from stoves and hinges to andirons and weathervanes. As with most folk art, though, the makers of these utilitarian pieces chose to embellish their work to make them interesting and attractive, although no more functional than if they left them unadorned. A stove could still heat a room whether it was a simple iron box or iron cast into a statue of George Washington.

This exhibition highlights these decorative, yet useful, objects made in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Iron mining and iron production were established in the colonies almost as soon as settlers arrived. By the American Revolution, Virginia had several furnaces providing the iron that was made into firebacks, stoveplates and a myriad of household items like ladles, toasters, trivets and tammels.

This exhibition was made possible through the generosity of Bonnie and Ken Shockey (Paul K. and Anna E. Shockey Family Foundation).

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Cookie Cutter 1954-399
ca.1800-1900
Branding Iron 2008-6
1750-1830
Pot 1953-325
ca.1750-1820
Pot 1962-160
ca.1750-1820
Cast iron pot 1991-641
ca.1750-1820
Colander 1979-293
ca.1780-1820
Fork 1955-108
ca.1750-1800
Spoon 1954-683
ca.1750-1800
Bootjack 1955.808.1
Possibly 1850-1875
Hoe 1979.808.10
ca.1770-1830
Eagle 1931.801.4
1850-1900
Eel Spear 1988-335
ca.1800-1850
Grater 1953-58
ca.1750-1840