Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 140, Factory Ceramics

Vase

ca. 1900 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

William Henry Grueby (1867-1925) began his career working for a brickworks in Boston. As the company's representative he visited the Chicago Exposition, 1893, where he met other potters and saw the work of French ceramicists. Auguste Delaherche became a major influence. In 1894 he set up the Grueby Faience Co. to continue production of bricks, tiles etc but also to begin making pottery. George Prentiss Kendrick, already well-known as a designer in metal wares, was designer to the pottery until 1901. Grueby's production was an instant success and gold and silver medals were awarded at the international exhibtion, Paris, 1900. By then, their wares were sold by the influential Samuel (Siegfried) Bing at his celebrated shop in Paris, from where the Museum purchased two examples. The clay used in the architectural faience production was also used for the pottery. The basic form was thrown and the raised leaves and flowers were applied in thin rolls of clay, arranged and worked by hand. Most modelling and decoration was done by the women students from Boston's Museum of Fine Arts and other schools. Grueby developed a range of matt glazes of which the green (known as Grueby Green) was the most successful and the most imitated.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Earthenware, the basic form cast, the decoration hand-modelled
Brief description
Vase, made by Grueby Faience Co., Boston, Massachusetts USA, about 1899, earthenware, slip-cast
Physical description
Vase, stoneware, decorated with leaf-like forms, covered with a matt brown glaze
Dimensions
  • Height: 24cm
  • Diameter: 13cm
Marks and inscriptions
'Grueby Faience Co. USA Boston' around a lotus flower within a circle and '135', impressed, and paper label.
Gallery label
Vase made by Grueby Faience Co., Boston, Massachusetts, USA about 1899 Marks: Earthenware, slip-cast 1684-1900(16/07/2008)
Object history
Purchased from Samuel (Siegfried) Bing's shop L'Art Nouveau, 22 rue de Provence, Paris

Historical significance: Purchased from Samuel (Siegfried) Bing's shop L'Art Nouveau, 22 rue de Provence, Paris
Summary
William Henry Grueby (1867-1925) began his career working for a brickworks in Boston. As the company's representative he visited the Chicago Exposition, 1893, where he met other potters and saw the work of French ceramicists. Auguste Delaherche became a major influence. In 1894 he set up the Grueby Faience Co. to continue production of bricks, tiles etc but also to begin making pottery. George Prentiss Kendrick, already well-known as a designer in metal wares, was designer to the pottery until 1901. Grueby's production was an instant success and gold and silver medals were awarded at the international exhibtion, Paris, 1900. By then, their wares were sold by the influential Samuel (Siegfried) Bing at his celebrated shop in Paris, from where the Museum purchased two examples. The clay used in the architectural faience production was also used for the pottery. The basic form was thrown and the raised leaves and flowers were applied in thin rolls of clay, arranged and worked by hand. Most modelling and decoration was done by the women students from Boston's Museum of Fine Arts and other schools. Grueby developed a range of matt glazes of which the green (known as Grueby Green) was the most successful and the most imitated.
Bibliographic reference
Jervis, SSJ: (ed) Art & Design in Europe and America, V&A, 1986, p.201
Collection
Accession number
1684-1900

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Record createdJuly 16, 2008
Record URL
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