Collections
Modern Mexican and Peruvian Silver
A Revolution in Design
In the twentieth century the Mexican silver industry experienced an unprecedented resurgence. Two North Americans catalyzed this renaissance. In the mid-1920s, Frederick Davis opened a gallery in Mexico City and developed a line of handwrought silver jewelry. William Spratling, an architect from New Orleans, established a workshop in Taxco in 1931 where he worked alongside a local master silversmith and a handful of young men. A brilliant marketing strategist Spratling reinvigorated Taxco’s economy by employing hundreds of local artisans and creating a thriving local industry. Other designers–several represented in LACMA’s collection–followed and established equally successful workshops.
Insistence on handwork and the value placed on experimentation impelled the achievement of the Mexican silver movement. Designers and craftsmen drew on pre-Columbian art, the Arts and Crafts movement, Art Deco, and modernism, resisting slavish imitation in favor of technical and formal innovation. Many objects on view in LACMA’s collection reveal a fascination with indigenous cultures and ancient Mesoamerican forms and materials. The artworks were worn and collected by people worldwide, including artists, writers, and politicians: George Gershwin, Leopold Stokowski, Mae West, Leon Trotsky, Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Miguel and Rosa Covarrubias, and Aldous Huxley all traveled to the quaint colonial town of Taxco, largely attracted by the revolution in Mexican silver.
—Ilona Katzew, 2013
William Spratling
Punch Bowl (commissioned by Manuel Ávila Camacho) (Recipiente para ponche [encargado por Manuel Ávila Camacho]), circa 1940-1944
William Spratling
Quetzalcoatl Brooch (Prendedor de Quetzalcóatl), 1938-1944
William Spratling
Bowl (Cuenco), circa 1938-1944
Héctor Aguilar
Frog Box (Caja con rana), circa 1940-1945
MATL (Matilde Poulat)
Framed Mask Brooch (Prendedor con máscara enmarcada), circa 1940
Los Castillo
Box (Caja), circa 1950-1955
Frederick Walter Davis
Cigar Box with Ancient-Style Mask (Caja de cigarros con máscara de estilo antiguo), circa 1935-1950
Margot de Taxco (Margot van Voorhies Carr)
Double-Fish Necklace or Brooches (Collar o prendedores con peces), circa 1955
William Spratling
Frog Bracelet (Pulcera con ranas), circa 1940-1945
William Spratling
Ovalado Tea Set (Juego de té Ovalado), circa 1945
Antonio Pineda
Necklace with Thumbnail Design (Collar con Diseño de huellas digitales), circa 1953
Héctor Aguilar
Feathers Bracelet (Pulsera con plumas), circa 1943-1948
Héctor Aguilar
Cascabeles (Bells) Necklace (Collar con cascabeles), circa 1940
Margot de Taxco (Margot van Voorhies Carr)
Netsuke Brooch (Broche con Netsuke), circa 1940
William Spratling
1968 Olympics Medallion (Medallón de las olimpiadas de 1968), 1967
Sigi Pineda
Necklace (Collar), 1956-1957
William Spratling
Ladle (Cucharón), circa 1931-1946
Graziella Laffi
Kero (Drinking Vessel), circa 1970-1980
Graziella Laffi
Kero (Drinking Vessel), circa 1970-1980
Graziella Laffi
Necklace and Cuff with Stylized Ancient Motifs (Collar y brazalete con motivos antiguos estilizados), circa 1960-1970