NEW YORK, NY.- With assistance from their partial funding program for museums,
Eli Wilner & Company recently completed the creation of a late 18th century style pier mirror for Drayton Hall Preservation Trust. March has been another successful month for Eli Wilner & Companys frame funding initiative, with $125,000 in partial grants having been distributed to date. Nearly $50,000 in funding is still available. Exciting new projects are being submitted on a daily basis by museums across the country. Remaining funds will be committed to new projects by April 30, 2025, and can be used for frame restoration, historic frame replication, or mirror replication projects. Interested institutions can apply by emailing the details of their reframing or frame restoration needs to info@eliwilner.com. No project is too large.
The elaborate hand-carved and parcel-gilt pier mirror for Drayton Hall was unveiled and featured prominently at the 2025 Charleston Show.
In the little lobby exhibition space at Festival Hall, pride of place goes to a mysterious pier mirror; or, rather, its doppelgänger, made by New York frame restorers Eli Wilner and Company to the specifications of the pier that the original before it disappearedwould have occupied in Drayton Halls first-floor drawing room. [Magazine Antiques, March/April 2025 issue, click here for full article]
Patricia Lowe Smith, Drayton Halls Director of Preservation, initially contacted Wilner in the Spring of 2024 about the potential project after they had discovered telltale marks on the original moldings surrounding the drawing room windows, indicating a lost pier mirror. Since no other documentation was found to provide the specifications or origin of the object, Wilner presented Draytons team with period-appropriate replacement options based on historical photographs and hand-tracings of Draytons walls.
The selected digital mockup was then printed to scale for Wilners master carpenters to begin construction of the walnut substrate and basswood blocks for the multiple hand carved elements. To get a better understanding of the depth proportions and construction methods that were not apparent in two-dimensional photographic images, they visited nearby institutions including the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the New-York Historical Society, and the Museum of the City of New York to examine similar objects.
After several months of woodworking and carving, the basswood portions of the frame were prepared with layers of finely sanded gesso and bole (a liquid clay) and watergilded. These delicate elements were then burnished and patinated to a period appropriate character. Meanwhile, the walnut substrate sections were stained.
Finally in February 2025, following an in-person studio visit with members from Drayton Halls preservation team, all portions of the frame were fully secured into position, and the glass and hanging hardware was installed.
Images from the opening night of the Charleston Show at Festival Hall, Charleston, SC below.
Photo Credit: ©MCG Photography.
Other replica mirror projects completed by Eli Wilner & Company are below.
Eli Wilner & Company has completed over 15,000 framing projects for private collectors, museums, and institutions including The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and The White House. Wilner was honored by the Historic Charleston Foundation with the Samuel Gaillard Stoney Conservation Craftsmanship Award, for their work in historic picture frame conservation. In 2024, Eli Wilner was presented with an Iris Award for Outstanding Dealer of the Year by the Bard Graduate Center in New York City.