Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 143, The Timothy Sainsbury Gallery

Apostle

Jug
ca.1842 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This jug has been relief moulded; a mass-production technique which involved one process, using elaborate plaster moulds, with no extra work required for adding decoration. Such wares could thus be produced in large numbers and were affordable and durable. Jugs, such as this one, were amongst the most widely used utilitarian vessels of the Nineteenth century; decorative as well as practical. Many different firms produced them and hundreds of different designs existed, as the competition to supply the cheap mass market was intense. Often the same design was produced in different sizes.

This 'apostle' jug, in the Gothic style, is one of the most iconic and successful of relief-moulded jug designs and depicts figures in architectural niches. It has an applied registration mark on its base, which tells us that the design was logged at the Design Registry, established in 1839 to protect original work from being copied.

Object details

Category
Object type
TitleApostle (manufacturer's title)
Materials and techniques
Smear-glazed stoneware
Brief description
'Apostle' jug, smear-glazed stoneware, made by Charles Meigh, Hanley, 1842
Physical description
Jug, relief-moulded buff- coloured stoneware, depicting saints in niches.
Dimensions
  • Height: 24cm
taken from registers
Styles
Production typeMass produced
Marks and inscriptions
  • A Royal coat-of-arms, 'Registered March 17 1842 by Charles Meigh Hanley' (applied and impressed to base)
  • 'Registered March 17 1842 by Charles Meigh Hanley' (applied and impressed)
Gallery label
Jug 'Apostle' Made by Charles Meigh, Hanley, Staffordshire, 1842 Marks: Royal Coat-of-Arms, 'Registered March 15 1842 by Charles Meigh Hanley', applied and impressed Smear-glazed stoneware Circ.388-1970(23/05/2008)
Production
Design registered in 1842
Subjects depicted
Summary
This jug has been relief moulded; a mass-production technique which involved one process, using elaborate plaster moulds, with no extra work required for adding decoration. Such wares could thus be produced in large numbers and were affordable and durable. Jugs, such as this one, were amongst the most widely used utilitarian vessels of the Nineteenth century; decorative as well as practical. Many different firms produced them and hundreds of different designs existed, as the competition to supply the cheap mass market was intense. Often the same design was produced in different sizes.

This 'apostle' jug, in the Gothic style, is one of the most iconic and successful of relief-moulded jug designs and depicts figures in architectural niches. It has an applied registration mark on its base, which tells us that the design was logged at the Design Registry, established in 1839 to protect original work from being copied.
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.388-1970

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Record createdMarch 31, 2008
Record URL
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