TeaTime

Tea Tells a Story at The Met’s New British Galleries

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City has offered galleries displaying British decorative arts since 1910; however, a recent $22 million renovation gives visitors an insightful look into the influence of tea and trade upon the rise of the British empire. The updated 10-room display, which begins in the 16th century and winds up in the 19th, includes entire rooms plucked from long-gone mansions and a 17th-century staircase from stately Cassiobury House, demolished in 1927. At some point in its history at The Met, the stairs were disassembled and stored. Its numerous parts have now been found and returned to their original grandeur. You can climb them as if you were a duke or duchess.

For teaists, the star of this Tea, Trade, and Empire exhibition comes soon after entering the gallery as visitors come face-to-face with a glittering light-filled curved display, featuring 100 British teapots—each with a unique story to tell.

“The case is meant to represent the world getting smaller with the trade of tea,” explains Wolf Burchard,

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