The Moores

1 They also wrote an article for this magazine on the subject: Sally and J. Roderick Moore, “Santo Domingo Pueblo jewelry,” The Magazine Antiques, vol. 176, no. 1 (July 2009), pp. 56–61. 

2 J. Roderick Moore, “Earthenware potters along the Great Road in Virginia and Tennessee,” ibid., vol. 124, no. 3 (September 1983), pp. 528–537.

3 J. Roderick Moore, “Painted chests from Wythe County, Virginia,” ibid., vol. 72, no. 3 (September 1982), pp. 516–521; and  J. Roderick Moore and Marshall Goodman, “Painted boxes and miniature chests from Shenandoah County, Virginia: The Stirewalt group,” ibid., vol. 172, no. 3 (September 2007), pp. 76–83. 

4 J. Roderick Moore, “Wythe County, Virginia, punched tin: Its influence and imitators,” ibid., vol. 126, no. 3 (September 1984), pp. 601–613.

SUMPTER PRIDDY III is a dealer in decorative and fine arts, primarily southern, from the late seventeenth century through the mid-nineteenth. He is the author of American Fancy: Exuberance in the Arts, 1790–1840.

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Pickle Dish, American China Manufactory (Bonnin and Morris), Philadelphia, 1771-72. Soft-paste porcelain with lead glaze; height 4 3/16, width 4 1/2

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