Punch Bowl
1809 (dated)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Every region had its local style, and the more isolated the potteries, the more idiosyncratic their products. Sussex had boasted potteries with a distinct local character since the early 18th century, but by the end of the eighteenth century these potteries began to develop techniques that were unique to the area: namely, inlaying the russet-brown iron-flecked body with printers’ type and metal stamps of tiny stars or other shapes, all filled with white slip and carefully scraped clean. A version of this also spread across the Kent border in the early nineteenth century to High Halden in Kent, where red clay storage jars were decorated with fronds of foliage, gouged or impressed and filled with white slip. At Brede in Sussex, a particular style of decoration with bands of interlaced hoops of stars flourished in the 1790s, usually found on cylindrical tobacco jars or tea canisters. Inlaid wares were also made at East Grinstead, and from the 1790s at Chailey, where the potters developed the technique into an elaborate art form.
Taken from Robin HIldyard, English Pottery 1620-1840, V&A Publications, 2005
Taken from Robin HIldyard, English Pottery 1620-1840, V&A Publications, 2005
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Lead-glazed earthenware with inlaid decoration |
Brief description | Punch bowl, lead-glazed earthenware with inlaid decoration. English, made in High Halden, Kent, dated 1809 |
Physical description | Bowl of red earthenware with decoration inlaid with white slip under a clear yellowish glaze. Round the outside two clusters of growing stems with leaves. Round the inside a narrow border consisting of a formal wreath. Inscribed: "A W 1809". |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Gallery label |
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Credit line | Given by Lady Lister |
Object history | Purchased by W.C. Alexander (the donor's father) from H.G.W. Harris of Hythe who described it as of Bredon and Sussex Ware. Subsequently thought to have been made in High Halden in Kent. |
Historical context | (3 October 1927, Letter from Butterfield) The bowl...is unquestionably the one I recommended the late Mr. W.C. Alexander to buy. It formerly belonged to Mrs. Weller of the Brede Pottery, who told me it was made at the pottery at Bothersden in Kent, ... |
Summary | Every region had its local style, and the more isolated the potteries, the more idiosyncratic their products. Sussex had boasted potteries with a distinct local character since the early 18th century, but by the end of the eighteenth century these potteries began to develop techniques that were unique to the area: namely, inlaying the russet-brown iron-flecked body with printers’ type and metal stamps of tiny stars or other shapes, all filled with white slip and carefully scraped clean. A version of this also spread across the Kent border in the early nineteenth century to High Halden in Kent, where red clay storage jars were decorated with fronds of foliage, gouged or impressed and filled with white slip. At Brede in Sussex, a particular style of decoration with bands of interlaced hoops of stars flourished in the 1790s, usually found on cylindrical tobacco jars or tea canisters. Inlaid wares were also made at East Grinstead, and from the 1790s at Chailey, where the potters developed the technique into an elaborate art form. Taken from Robin HIldyard, English Pottery 1620-1840, V&A Publications, 2005 |
Bibliographic reference | The Connoisseur, May 1912 |
Collection | |
Accession number | C.350-1919 |
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Record created | March 31, 2008 |
Record URL |
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