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Plate

  • Place of origin:

    Staffordshire, England (made)

  • Date:

    ca. 1775 (made)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Unknown (production)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Earthenware transfer-printed in black enamel and moulded

  • Credit Line:

    Given by Lady Charlotte Schreiber

  • Museum number:

    414:1141-1885

  • Gallery location:

    Ceramics Study Galleries, Britain, room 138, case 9, shelf 7

  • Download image

Tea began to be imported into Britain from the middle of the 17th century but remained a luxury item until import duties were abolished in 1784. A fashionable and social drink, during the 18th century it was prepared in front of guests. English tea drinkers differed from their Chinese counterparts by preferring to drink tea hot and with milk and sugar, the latter becoming increasingly available through West Indies sugar plantations which relied on the labour of African slaves.

‘The Tea Party’ engraving by Robert Hancock, which appears on this plate, is one of the most popular designs to have been used on 18th century English ceramics. It shows a couple drinking tea in a garden, attended by a young black male servant who pours hot water from a kettle into a teapot. About 10,000 Africans are estimated to have been living in 18th century England, many working as, often unpaid, domestic staff. For their affluent owners these African servants were status symbols who offered ‘exotic associations’ like the new beverage, tea.

Physical description

Plate of white earthenware with a wavy edge, and moulded with feather pattern. Transfer-printed in black enamel with scene of 'The Tea Party' in the centre of bowl, and with raised edge with repeated motif of detached sprays of flowers.

Place of Origin

Staffordshire, England (made)

Date

ca. 1775 (made)

Artist/maker

Unknown (production)

Materials and Techniques

Earthenware transfer-printed in black enamel and moulded

Dimensions

Diameter: 19.4 cm

Descriptive line

Plate of white earthenware with a wavy edge and moulded, Staffordshire, ca. 1775.

Materials

Earthenware

Techniques

Moulded; Transfer-printed

Subjects depicted

Man; Woman; Birds; Trees; Children; Garden; Servant

Categories

Ceramics; Tea, Coffee & Chocolate wares; Earthenware; Black History

Collection code

CER

Download image
Qr_O123366
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