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Dish

Dish

  • Place of origin:

    Stoke-on-Trent, England (made)

  • Date:

    1831 (made)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Spode Ceramic Works (manufacturer)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Porcelain

  • Credit Line:

    Given by Miss H. M. Gulson, in memory of her late uncle, Josiah Spode

  • Museum number:

    567-1902

  • Gallery location:

    British Galleries, room 120, case 19

  • Download image

Object Type
In the early 19th century English pottery and porcelain dinner services entirely superseded those imported from China. As before, large numbers of plates and dishes were required. Increasingly these plates were modelled on silverware, with wavy and heavily-moulded rims.

Collectors & Owners
This dish ia part of a service that was acquired by the V&A from Miss H. M. Gulson, who had inherited it from her uncle, Josiah Spode IV (1823-1893). Although the Museum wished to accept only a token number of pieces, because of the impossibility of displaying the service in its entirety, eventually they agreed to take it all, rather than destroy the integrity of a documented service. Since 1902 it has largely remained in store, although parts of the service have in recent years been loaned to 10 Downing Street. The British Galleries now provide a fitting permanent display of the many different shapes used in the service.

The Spode family provenance suggests that the service should represent the grandest and most opulent porcelain made at the factory at Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, in the last years of Spode ownership. The factory archives, now available to collectors, show that the moulded shape called 'Royal Embossed' was first made about 1831. This date exactly agrees with the introduction of the painted pattern (No.4964). It would seem therefore that Josiah Spode IV, only eight years old in 1831, may have inherited the service later from his own father, Josiah Spode III.

Place of Origin

Stoke-on-Trent, England (made)

Date

1831 (made)

Artist/maker

Spode Ceramic Works (manufacturer)

Materials and Techniques

Porcelain

Labels and date

British Galleries:
PART OF A DINNER SERVICE

About 1820; numbers 30-34, 1831

This large service is characteristic of the extensive and richly decorated porcelain that was available to an increasingly wide range of buyers during this period. Marketing through London showrooms played an important role in the selling of such ensembles. Massed displays were a familiar sight to the visiting public as in the Wedgwood showroom illustrated on the left. [27/03/2003]

Subjects depicted

Flowers

Categories

Porcelain; Ceramics; Tableware & cutlery; Eating

Collection code

CER

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Qr_O77669
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