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SAM'S collection
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Candlestick
Photo: Elizabeth Mann

Candlestick

Dateca. 1800
Label TextThese tapered candlesticks of Chinese porcelain, circa 1800, embody the West-meets-East story, representing wares produced in Jingdezhen during the 18th and 19th centuries for the European and American markets. While Europe was at long last able to produce their own porcelain after about 1710, there was still great cachet in acquiring Chinese wares, along with tea, silks, and spices as part of the China trade. Robert Shields may have been known as “one of the Grand Old Men in Northwest architecture” (Pacific Northwest Magazine), but it is his enduring passion for art that leaves a lasting legacy at SAM. When Mr Shields passed away in the summer of 2012, he left his entire estate to the Seattle Art Museum, its value to be used in support of the Asian art program. One of the foremost Northwest architects of the mid-20th century, Mr Shields graduated from the University of Washington with an architecture degree in 1941. After serving in the Navy in WWII, he returned to Seattle and founded the architecture firm Tucker, Shields and Terry in 1946. Over the course of the next 30 years he established a reputation as one of the foremost Northwest architects as he designed homes, commercial spaces, the KIRO-TV headquarters, and Canlis restaurant. A champion of Northwest art and artists (he counted Zoe Dusanne, Don Foster, Morris Graves, and Kenneth Callahan among his friends), Mr Shields was also passionate about Asian and Native American art, as well as European decorative arts; and he collected in all of these areas. He was a member of the museum’s Asian Art Council, the Seattle Clay Club, and the Puget Sound Bonsai Society. In honor of the opening of SAM Downtown in 1991, he donated several Japanese objects and a Morris Graves painting to the collection.
Object number2013.4.10.1
Photo CreditPhoto: Elizabeth Mann
Credit LineGift of the Estate of Robert M. Shields
DimensionsHeight: 11 3/8 in. (28.9 cm)
MediumBlue and white porcelain
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
ca. 1800
Object number: 2013.4.10.2
Photo: Beth Mann
second half 18th century
Object number: 49.28
Photo: Natali Wiseman
2018
Object number: 2019.6
English, Worcester
1760 - 70
Object number: 88.107
Plate
English, Chelsea
ca. 1765-70
Object number: 69.169
Photo: Paul Macapia
Meissen manufactory, German
ca. 1725-30
Object number: 69.203
Plateau de fromager
French, Vincennes
1753
Object number: 68.222
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1780-1802
Object number: SC79.135
Plate
ca. 1770
Object number: 92.44.2
ca. 1769-75
Object number: 85.294
Photo: Beth Mann
ca. 1775-80
Object number: 56.43
Cup and Saucer
ca. 1750
Object number: 72.55