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Jumping Horse
Jumping Horse
Artist (American)

Jumping Horse

Date1850-1855
DimensionsOverall: 22 3/4 × 27 3/8 in. (57.8 × 69.5 cm)
Object numberN0230.1979
Credit LineCollection of the Fenimore Art Museum. Bequest of Effie Thixton Arthur
Photograph by Richard Walker
Label TextWeathervanes of horses, like the others in this group, were designed and produced in the mid- and late- 19th century when the rise in popularity of horse breeding, driving, and racing coincided with the development of the commercial weathervane industry. Alvin Jewell, of Waltham, Massachusetts, was one of the pioneers of manufactured weathervanes. He offered this pattern in gilded copper beginning in the 1850s. His patterns were continued by L.W. Cushing and Stillman White. This weathervane is a sheet-metal copy of Jewell's weathervane by an anonymous metalworker.
Exhibition History“American Folk Art: Collection from the Fenimore Art Museum,” Mona Bismarck Foundation, Paris, France, January 25, 2001 – March 24, 2001.
On View
Not on view
Bowl
Haida
c. 1870
Indian Archer
Unidentified Artist
18th Century
Rooster
Unidentified Artist
1845-1855
Fish
Unidentified Artist
c. 1870
Man Seated
Anthony Wise Baecher
1880-1889
Husband of Eunice Day
John Brewster Jr.
1820
Steeple With Rooster
Unidentified Artist
n.d.
Pipe Bowl
Tlingit
c. 1850
Copper
Haida or Tsimshian
c. 1840-1860

5798 STATE HIGHWAY 80
COOPERSTOWN NY, 13326
607-547-1400

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