Jar and Cover thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 139, The Curtain Foundation Gallery

Jar and Cover

after 1930 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Jar and cover of glazed earthenware with white and blue horizontal stripes outside, white inside.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Jar
  • Jar Cover
Materials and techniques
Earthenware, glazed
Brief description
Jar and cover, Cornish Kitchenware, glazed earthenware, manufactured by T.G. Green & Co. Ltd, Burton upon Trent, after 1930
Physical description
Jar and cover of glazed earthenware with white and blue horizontal stripes outside, white inside.
Dimensions
  • Height: 13.2cm
  • Width: 10.6cm
Marks and inscriptions
Shield with 'T.G. Green and Co. Ltd., made in England, Cornish Kitchenware' (Maker's mark printed in green)
Credit line
Given by Mr Richrad Dennis
Historical context
By the 1930s the kitchen was developing as a room in which the family spent time. It became a social space, not just a separate, purely functional room. In middle class households servants and housemaids were less common, and a new design consciousness and consumer demand for pleasing kitchenware form the cooking range to storage jars was established.

T.G. Green hit a particular market with the Cornish Kitchenware range. Retailed through Woolworths in the early 1930s as standard ware in a wide range of matching kitchen vessels, it has been in continual production ever since, with occasional design updates (like the post-war mug). The ware consisted mainly of breakfast ware (egg cups, milk jugs, cereal bowls and mugs) or storage jars which gave a cottagey display of cooking ingredients and was intended for everyday use. It is probable that middle class householders would have had a more refined bone china service for use at dinner, a more formal meal which was eaten in the dining room rather than the kitchen.

It is interesting that in the 1920s similar ware was being produced in Germany, the German title evoking an American influence. Whether Wiener Werkbund or Early American in influence to the British eye Cornish Kitchenware has always been associated with the nostalgic ideal of the English Cottage.
[Susan McCormack, 'British Design at Home', p.125]
Collection
Accession number
C.32B&C-1987

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Record createdFebruary 8, 2000
Record URL
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