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Revolution in Taste

Exhibition Info
Cockle Pot 1972-14
Revolution in TasteSeptember 27, 1996 - May 1, 2025

As the eighteenth century progressed, British citizens both at home and in the colonies increasingly had access to a world-wide trade in exotic, fashionable, and useful goods. "Revolution in Taste" explores the objects and evolving social customs that became part of daily life for the expanding middle and upper classes.

Made of ceramic, glass, and metal, items like coffee cups, teaspoons, and dinner plates offered stylish and exciting new forms, improved materials, and dazzling colors. Elegant dining, tea drinking, and the consumption of alcoholic beverages became the focus of social life in early America, leading a revolution in taste that is still underway even today.

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1947-410, Ale Glass
ca. 1705
KC1973-503
ca. 1760
DS1989-0187
Matthew Boulton & Plate Co.
ca. 1790
D2008-CMD, Bartmann Bottle
1607 (dated)
DS2005-0033
1699 (dated)
C70-681. Basket.
William Kidney
1736-1737
D2007-CMD-0021
American China Manufactory
April 23, 1773 (dated)
DS1985-821
1785-1800
KC1968-613
1700-1750
DS1997-0484
Chelsea Porcelain Manufactory
1745-1749