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Friday, 27 March 2015 11:11

Jay Robert Stiefel to Discuss the Handiworks of Benjamin Franklin and Other Philadelphia Artisans on April 2 at Yale University

Dressing Table or Lowboy, 1745-1755, Philadelphia. Solomon Fussell (Attributed), William Savery (Attributed). Curly maple, poplar, white cedar, and brass; H. 30, W. 35 1/20, D. 22 inches. Private Collection. Dressing Table or Lowboy, 1745-1755, Philadelphia. Solomon Fussell (Attributed), William Savery (Attributed). Curly maple, poplar, white cedar, and brass; H. 30, W. 35 1/20, D. 22 inches. Private Collection.

On Thursday, April 2, 2015, at 4PM, Jay Robert Stiefel, a lawyer and well-known collector and historian of American decorative arts, will give a lecture entitled “Leather Apron Men: Benjamin Franklin & Philadelphia’s Artisans” at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. The event, which is under the auspices of Yale's History Department, is free and open to the public.

The illustrated talk will center on Benjamin Franklin’s work as an artisan as well as his role in fostering the public appreciation of his fellow craftsmen. One of America’s foremost founding fathers and the country’s first printing magnate, Franklin tended toward self-deprecation, writing in a 1740 issue of his “Pennsylvania Gazette” that he was no more than “a poor ordinary mechanick of this City.” But Franklin, who crafted witty editorial that promoted and encouraged his fellow artisans and founded such enduring cultural institutions as the Library Company of Philadelphia and the American Philosophical Society, served as a role model for his peers. In addition to encouraging many Philadelphia artisans to elevate themselves, Franklin provided them with opportunities for education that had previously been reserved for the privileged. Stiefel will illustrate Franklin’s profound influence with pieces of furniture and fine art, including “Handiworks” made by Franklin and other admired Philadelphia artisans.

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