Antique ROOKWOOD 3-Handle PORTRAIT CUP w/STERLING RIM Signed Mathew Daly 1896
$409.20
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- Condition: Antique Rookwood 3-Handle Portrait Cup SIGNED by Mathew Andrew Daly (M.A.D.). Dated 1896. Mold number #659. Standard glaze. Features a man’s portrait beneath a sterling rim. Marked STERLING. 6.5”H x 8”W x 8”D. Diameter of sterling rim: 4.5”. WT=2.00 lbs. CONDITION: Good. The portrait itself is fine and untouched. Two of the 3 handles have been professionally repaired. There have been a few well-executed touch-ups. ABOUT THE COMPANY: Cincinnati’s Rookwood Pottery opened its doors in 1880, and continues to be the most celebrated and collected American pottery. By the time Rookwood merged with Tiffany & Company in 1967, the Pottery could not recover from its Great Depression losses, and Rookwood closed its kilns the same year. QUESTIONS? Please send us a message, and we will promptly reply.
- Shape Number:: 659
- All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
- Original/Reproduction: Antique Original
- Color: Burnt Umber,Orange, Green, Yellow, Brown, Silver
- Type: Portrait Mug
- Brand: Rookwood
- Main Color: Burnt Umber/Orange
- Production Style: Art Pottery
- Material: Clay
- Date:: 1896
- Artist Signed:: Mathew A. Daly
- Object Type: 3-Handle Portrait Cup
- Style: Standard Glaze with Sterling Rim
- Glaze: Standard
Description
The Grand Antique Mall, located in Cincinnati, Ohio, presents an
Antique Rookwood 3-Handle Portrait Cup SIGNED by Mathew Andrew Daly (M.A.D.). Dated 1896. Mold number #659. Standard glaze. Features a man’s portrait beneath a sterling rim. Marked STERLING. 6.5”H x 8”W x 8”D. Diameter of sterling rim: 4.5”.
WT=2.00 lbs. CONDITION: Good. The portrait itself is fine and untouched. Two of the 3 handles have been professionally repaired. There have been a few well-executed touch-ups. ABOUT THE COMPANY: Cincinnati’s Rookwood Pottery opened its doors in 1880, and continues to be the most celebrated and collected American pottery. By the time Rookwood merged with Tiffany & Company in 1967, the Pottery could not recover from its Great Depression losses, and Rookwood closed its kilns the same year.