Jug thumbnail 1
Jug thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Glass, Room 131

Jug

1806-1820 (made), 1806-1820 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Davenport is mostly known as a manufacturer of creamware and fine porcelain during the late 18th and early 19th century. In 1801, John Davenport entered a partnership with his old patron, Kinnersley and Edward Grafton of Stourbridge, to make high quality table glass at Longport, Stoke-on-Trent. The partnership finished in 1807 and the firm was continued by John Davenport and his cousin James as J. and J. Davenport. On 1st August 1806, John Davenport took out a patent for a special type of enamel decoration. This was a very complicated process that produced very fine, faint decorations inscribed into the enamel layer before firing. These were only produced for a few decades and almost all surviving examples are drinking glasses and this is one of only one or two jugs know to us. The most frequently occurring decorations show elegant country-sportsmen in contemporary dress. It is likely that such table wares were used to serve refreshments for country gentlemen who partook in such pursuits.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Blown glass, hot-worked with applied handle and foot, fine enamel layer with scratched decoration; this is a special type of decoration patented by John Davenport in 1806; the enamel consists of cullet, pearl ashes, lead oxide, arsenic, sand, borax, calcinated borax and loaf-sugar suspended in water and ordinary writing ink, after it has been brushed onto the glass, once dry, a decoration is scratched into this layer after which it is fired on.
Brief description
Jug, clear colourless glass, with patent decoration of a sportsman loading his gun with two hounds at his feet, Davenport, Staffordshire, 1806-1820
Physical description
Jug, clear, colourless glass, with bulbous body and everted rim in trifoil shape, attached handle and foot; decorated with a scratched decoration on a fine pale enamel layer with a huntsman loading his gun and two dogs in a landscape with ruin and a cottage and neo-classical borders; the area underneath whare the pontil was attached has been cut and polished smooth.
Dimensions
  • Body height: 18.3cm
  • Greatest, including handle width: 21.0cm
  • Body diameter: 16.3cm
Production typesmall batch
Marks and inscriptions
'patent' (This refers to the special decoration patent taken out by Davenport on 1st August 1806, incised within a small rectangle of enamel on the bottom of the jug.)
Credit line
Bought with the assistance of an anonymous charitable trust
Object history
The jug was previously owned by 'Monique', who took it to the BBC's Antique roadshow at Rochester Cathedral.
Production
John Davenport took out a patent for this type of decoration on 1st August 1806. In 1801, John Davenport entered a partnership with his old patron, Kinnersley and Edward Grafton of Stourbridge, to make high quality table glass. The partnership finished in 1807 and the firm was continued by John Davenport and his cousin James as J. and J. Davenport.
Association
Summary
Davenport is mostly known as a manufacturer of creamware and fine porcelain during the late 18th and early 19th century. In 1801, John Davenport entered a partnership with his old patron, Kinnersley and Edward Grafton of Stourbridge, to make high quality table glass at Longport, Stoke-on-Trent. The partnership finished in 1807 and the firm was continued by John Davenport and his cousin James as J. and J. Davenport. On 1st August 1806, John Davenport took out a patent for a special type of enamel decoration. This was a very complicated process that produced very fine, faint decorations inscribed into the enamel layer before firing. These were only produced for a few decades and almost all surviving examples are drinking glasses and this is one of only one or two jugs know to us. The most frequently occurring decorations show elegant country-sportsmen in contemporary dress. It is likely that such table wares were used to serve refreshments for country gentlemen who partook in such pursuits.
Bibliographic references
  • Ronald B. Brown, 'The Davenports and their Glass 1801-1887', in: The Journal of The Glass Association, Vol I (1985), pp. 30-40 Gives a history of Davenports patent glass and illustates various examples. Pl 13, p. 39 depicts a similar huntsman.
  • Bonhams, London, sale 13434, Wednesday 21 September 2005lots 149-158 Some very good examples of Davenport's patent glass from the Joyce Mountain Collection
  • Andy M. McConnell, in: Glass Circle News, Issue 125, Vol 34 (2011), 1, p. 17 Describes the history of the jug, previously owned by 'Monique', who took it to the BBC's Antique roadshow at Rochester Cathedral.
  • Charles R. Hajdamach, British Glass 1800-1914, Woodbridge 1991, pp. 250-51, plate 243 Discussion of Davenport's patent glass and depicts a tumbler depicting a similar sportsman loading his gun.
Other number
9126 - Glass gallery number
Collection
Accession number
C.50-2011

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Record createdJuly 12, 2011
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