Skip to main content
2022.900.10, Ant Cup
Ant Cup
2022.900.10, Ant Cup

Ant Cup

Dateca. 1870
Maker Rye Pottery
MediumStoneware with iron slip
DimensionsOverall: 1 9/16 × 6 3/8in. (4 × 16.2cm)
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number2022.900.10
DescriptionAnt Cup: thrown stoneware dish of deep circular shape with integral center cylinder or cup; wire trimmed foot; the body dipped in an iron-rich Albany-type slip.
Label TextThe ant cup is among the rarest of surviving Southern utilitarian ceramic forms. Popular in Alabama and Georgia, one of the cylindrical straight-sided cup or bowl like objects would have been placed under each leg of a food or pie safe, sugar chest, or cellarette. Then the mote of each vessel would have been filled with linseed oil, turpentine, or coal oil to deter ants and other insects from crawling up the legs of the piece of furniture, thus protecting the enclosed food stuffs.
No image number on slide
1861-1870
2009 Record shot by C. Lafiandra. Face jug.
ca. 1895
No image number on slide
ca. 1820
No image number on slide
ca. 1876
Bottle 2015-343
ca. 1823
1958-540, Jug
ca. 1760
DS2005-0428
ca. 1920
Coffeepot 1998-167
ca. 1710
2023-321, Tankard
ca. 1710