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(c) 2022 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Castle Acre Tiles: Vicar of Stowe, Diagonal
(c) 2022 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
(c) 2022 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston

Castle Acre Tiles: Vicar of Stowe, Diagonal

primary (established Doylestown, Pennsylvania, 1898)
designer (Doylestown, Pennsylvania, 1856 - 1930, Doylestown, Pennsylvania)
Date1901
Place MadeDoylestown, Pennsylvania, United States, North America
MediumGlazed ceramic
Dimensions4 x 4 in. (10.2 x 10.2 cm)
ClassificationsArchitectural Elements
Credit LineIsabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Accession numberC27c3.4
eMuseum ID729355
Other NumberMC182
EmbARK ObjectID26553
Previous NumberC27c3.d
TMS Source ID10248
Last Updated8/9/24
Status
Not on view
Web CommentaryIsabella Stewart Gardner oversaw all the details of the Museum during its design and construction, 1899–1902. She collaborated with the tile maker and owner of the Moravian Pottery and Tile Works, Henry Chapman Mercer, on the galleries’ custom floors. Ceramicists and trained laborers produced Mercer’s unique designs by molding tiles from handmade casts and applying slips and glazes for firing. His earliest notable series, Castle Acre, drew inspiration from medieval tiles in Europe and can be seen throughout the Gardner Museum.
BibliographyNotesGilbert Wendell Longstreet and Morris Carter. General Catalogue (Boston, 1935) p. 87. (as made by Henry Chapman Mercer of Doylestown, Pennsylvania)  
Cleota Reed. Henry Chapman Mercer and the Moravian Pottery and tile Works (Philadelphia, 1980) p. 203, no. 182   
Christina Nielsen et. al. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum: A Guide (New Haven, 2017), p. 67, ill.
Maggie Goldstein, "Henry Mercer's Moravian Pottery and Tile Works at Fenway Court," Inside the Collection (blog), Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 23 January 2024, https://www.gardnermuseum.org/blog/henry-mercers-moravian-pottery-and-tile-works-fenway-court  
ProvenanceNotesProbably purchased by Isabella Stewart Gardner from the Moravian Pottery and Tile Works, Doylestown, Pennsylvania on 14 June 1901 for $608 (for about 1,812 square feet of tiles).