three-fine-pieces-of-american-brilliant-period-cut-glass
Lot 1447
Three Fine Pieces of American Brilliant Period Cut Glass
Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Including an ewer form pitcher with applied handle and block foot (12.75 in.); an hourglass shaped case with scalloped rim (16 in.); and a tall tapered pitcher with applied handle (14 in.), all unmarked but of the quality of Hawkes or Dorflinger.

From the Collection of the late Dr. Margery Williams Adams and Dr. George Carlisle Adams, Charlotte, North Carolina
Margery and Carlisle Adams were lifelong patrons of the arts in their hometown of Charlotte, North Carolina. They met in Paris where they were both Fulbright Scholars, she studying at the Sorbonne, and he teaching Pediatrics to French physicians.

Margery (1921-2022) grew up in Worcester, MA. She graduated from Smith College, held a Masters and a Ph.D. in Art History from Radcliffe College (now Harvard University), and taught Art History at Radcliffe and Queens College in Charlotte. She inherited from her uncle - Frank Smith, a Worcester attorney - an extraordinary art collection of Italian antiques and works by early 20th century contemporary artists, the core of which has been donated to the Worcester Art Museum and Smith College Museum of Art. Her personal interest in collecting focused on New England furniture and 18th century coin silver spoons. She was instrumental in securing the Delhom Ceramics Collection for the Mint Museum of Art in Charlotte.

Carlisle Adams (1923-1996) graduated from Harvard University and Harvard Medical School and began collecting early American furniture and paintings during his freshman year of college to furnish a spartan dorm room. His eclectic tastes encompassed French fans and paintings, Italian furniture, and Persian rugs, his vast collection now residing at San Diego State University. He was a lifelong opera enthusiast, and he served on the boards of both the Charlotte Opera and the Charlotte Symphony.

Overall good condition; the block foot pitcher with rim chips and edge chips to base; vase appears to be in very good condition with no noticeable chips or cracks; the tall pitcher with a very small edge chip to the spout area.