Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 139, The Curtain Foundation Gallery

Jardinière

ca. 1870 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This company is often known simply as Gien Pottery, after its location in that city. It was established in about 1822 by Merlin Hall, the English founder of the factory of Creil & Montereau, which specialised in earthenwares decorated with English scenes to appeal to the English market. The pottery in Gien, on the other hand, specialised in traditional French earthenwares with scenes and motifs taken from French historical sources, heraldic emblems and contemporary politics. In 1856 it came under the ownership of Geoffroy, Guérin & Cie and thereafter it exhibited at international exhibitions in Paris (1844, where it won an award) and 1867, in London (1862) and Vienna (1873). By the late 1880s it was being criticised for decorated surfaces imitating materials such as wood, and praised for the increasingly immense size of its wares - some vases reached 3 metres in height and 1.2 metres in diameter.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Earthenware, printed in blue
Brief description
Jardinière, one of a pair, earthenware with decoration printed in blue, made by Geoffroy, Guerin & Cie, Gien, France, ca. 1870
Physical description
Jardinière, circular, with two lions' mask handles, fluted lower body and foot, and rope-scrolled rim. Printed with scrolls etc in classical style
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 15cm
  • Height: 14cm
Marks and inscriptions
'Gien' within a scroll, beneath a turret, printed; 'VS16 16' indistinct and other unidentified marks, incised
Object history
One of a pair with 1434-1870.
Subject depicted
Summary
This company is often known simply as Gien Pottery, after its location in that city. It was established in about 1822 by Merlin Hall, the English founder of the factory of Creil & Montereau, which specialised in earthenwares decorated with English scenes to appeal to the English market. The pottery in Gien, on the other hand, specialised in traditional French earthenwares with scenes and motifs taken from French historical sources, heraldic emblems and contemporary politics. In 1856 it came under the ownership of Geoffroy, Guérin & Cie and thereafter it exhibited at international exhibitions in Paris (1844, where it won an award) and 1867, in London (1862) and Vienna (1873). By the late 1880s it was being criticised for decorated surfaces imitating materials such as wood, and praised for the increasingly immense size of its wares - some vases reached 3 metres in height and 1.2 metres in diameter.
Collection
Accession number
1434A-1870

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Record createdJune 22, 2010
Record URL
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