Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 145

Pattern Plate

ca. 1795-1800 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Pattern plates were sample plates showing alternative patterns for borders. They were used as samples by travelling salesmen or ‘riders’. Unusually, this one is inscribed with both the pattern number and the number of repeats for the circumference of a standard dinner plate.

Davenport was one of the big four English ceramic firms during the early-mid 19th century, alongside Minton, Spode and Wedgwood, and was generally at the cutting edge of design, but not always innovative in terms of materials and techniques. However, the firm left no archive, and in part because it did not pioneer a new ceramic material with which the factory’s name became synonymous (as with Wedgwood with Jasper and Minton with Majolica), and because it left no archive, its importance was largely forgotten until the 1970s.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Creamware (cream-coloured earthenware), painted in enamels
Brief description
Pattern plate, creamware painted in enamels, Davenport's factory, Longport, Staffordshire, ca. 1795-1800
Physical description
Plain circular creamware dinner plate, the border painted with Davenport factory creamware patterns in yellow, brown, purple green and black enamels (pattern numbers 60, 59, 61, 62, 63, and 67 are inscribed in purple, and these are annotated with the number of repeats per plate (25, 6, 22, 6, 16, and 16 respectively), the number of repeats being given in the format '25 round this' etc).
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 24.9cm
Marks and inscriptions
Impressed factory mark of 'Davenport' above an anchor
Credit line
Given by the American Friends of the V&A Museum through the generosity of Judy Novak
Object history
Bought from the Joyce Mountain Collection (Bonhams, London, 21 September 2005). Previously sold 'Wateringbury Place, Christie's, 2 June 1978', according to a saleroom label. Illustrated as from the collection of the late Stanley W. Fisher in G. Godden and T. Lockett's, Davenport: China, Earthenware and Glass, 1794-1887 (1989), pl. 44, and as in the collection of W. S. Fisher, Bewdley, in G. Godden's Illustrated Encyclopaedia of English Pottery and Porcelain (1966), p. 118.
Summary
Pattern plates were sample plates showing alternative patterns for borders. They were used as samples by travelling salesmen or ‘riders’. Unusually, this one is inscribed with both the pattern number and the number of repeats for the circumference of a standard dinner plate.

Davenport was one of the big four English ceramic firms during the early-mid 19th century, alongside Minton, Spode and Wedgwood, and was generally at the cutting edge of design, but not always innovative in terms of materials and techniques. However, the firm left no archive, and in part because it did not pioneer a new ceramic material with which the factory’s name became synonymous (as with Wedgwood with Jasper and Minton with Majolica), and because it left no archive, its importance was largely forgotten until the 1970s.
Bibliographic reference
Illustrated as from the collection of the late Stanley W. Fisher in G. Godden and T. Lockett's, Davenport: China, Earthenware and Glass, 1794-1887 (1989), pl. 44, and as in the collection of W. S. Fisher, Bewdley, in G. Godden's Illustrated Encyclopaedia of English Pottery and Porcelain (1966), p. 118.
Collection
Accession number
C.63-2005

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Record createdJanuary 3, 2006
Record URL
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