Dish
ca. 1770 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Sweetmeat or pickle dish, of hard-paste porcelain painted in enamels; segmental with a wavy outline on the outer circumference, and with high sides sloping outwards from a high base; painted inside and outside with slight formal borders in crimson; the sides are decorated externally with scattered sprays of flowers and detached sprays, and inside on the bottom is a single sprig
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Hard-paste porcelain painted in enamels |
Brief description | Sweetmeat or pickle dish, of hard-paste porcelain painted in enamels, segmental with a wavy outline on the outer circumference, and with high sides sloping outwards from a high base, made by Bristol porcelain factory, Bristol, ca. 1770 |
Physical description | Sweetmeat or pickle dish, of hard-paste porcelain painted in enamels; segmental with a wavy outline on the outer circumference, and with high sides sloping outwards from a high base; painted inside and outside with slight formal borders in crimson; the sides are decorated externally with scattered sprays of flowers and detached sprays, and inside on the bottom is a single sprig |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Given by Lady Charlotte Schreiber |
Object history | Part of an assembled set of seven trays with a wooden stand 414:751/ to G-1885 (Sch. I 741 to G). These pieces were purchased by Lady Charlotte Schreiber from the following: Heath, Peterborough, for 7 shillings 6 pence in December 1871; Walker's sale, Sotheby's, for £ 5 shillings in March 1873; Chance, London, for £10 6 shillings in 1874 (tray) |
Historical context | Loosely similar sets, with four shaped dishes around a central one, are shown in Wedgwood's creamware catalogue of 1773 and in the Don Pottery catalogue of 1808, where they are described as 'for Pickles of different kinds' and 'Pickle trays furnished' respectively. These Bristol porcelain dishes were catalogued by Lady Charlotte Schreiber in 1885, and by Bernard Rackham in the 1910s and 1920s, as being for the dessert, but they may well have been intended for pickles. |
Subject depicted | |
Other number | Sch. I 741C - Schreiber number |
Collection | |
Accession number | 414:751/C-1885 |
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Record created | February 10, 2009 |
Record URL |
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