Phyllida thumbnail 1
Phyllida thumbnail 2
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On display

Phyllida

Tile Panel
1864 - ca.1870 (designed), 1868 - ca.1870 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

From a series of tiles based on Chaucer's Legend of Goode Wimmen.This panel is one of two acquired by the Museum from 1 Palace Green, the London house of George Howard, the Earl of Carlisle. As tiles, Chaucer's Legend of Goode Wimmen first appeared on a fireplace in Sandroyd, the house designed by Philip Webb for the painter J.R. Spencer Stanhope in 1860 and furnished thereafter. The figure was designed for windows at Birket Foster's house The Hill. Burne-Jones noted in his passbook now in the Fitzwilliam Museum in 1869: 'To touching up ssome Good Women and I would rather have been boilded ten times over £1.1.0.' In the Museum's panel, the figure has suffered some of the technical problems that Morris encountered in the firing of his tiles. The skilfully decoarted framing Scroll-pattern tiles with special border painted for the Palace Green commission are the only know examples painted at Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Co. All other examples of the pattern, and many variations, are Dutch-made.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • Phyllida (popular title)
  • Imago Phyllidis Martyris (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
hand-painted in various colours (the figure) and blue (Scroll) on tin-glazed earthenware Dutch blanks.
Brief description
Tile panel designed by Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris for Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Co, 1864-1870s
Physical description
3 tiles painted with a female figure holding a flowering branch, and 10 border tiles painted with a foliate design.
Dimensions
  • Height: 77.2cm
  • Width: 30.2cm
taken from catalogue
Style
Credit line
Given by the Crown Estate Commissioners
Object history
From 1 Palace Green, London (1st floor front room fire-place) Decorated for the Earl of Carlisle.
Production
Figure designed by Edward Burne-Jones in 1864 and border tiles by Morris in Ca.1870. Painted on Dutch blanks.
Literary referenceLegend of Goode Wimmen
Summary
From a series of tiles based on Chaucer's Legend of Goode Wimmen.This panel is one of two acquired by the Museum from 1 Palace Green, the London house of George Howard, the Earl of Carlisle. As tiles, Chaucer's Legend of Goode Wimmen first appeared on a fireplace in Sandroyd, the house designed by Philip Webb for the painter J.R. Spencer Stanhope in 1860 and furnished thereafter. The figure was designed for windows at Birket Foster's house The Hill. Burne-Jones noted in his passbook now in the Fitzwilliam Museum in 1869: 'To touching up ssome Good Women and I would rather have been boilded ten times over £1.1.0.' In the Museum's panel, the figure has suffered some of the technical problems that Morris encountered in the firing of his tiles. The skilfully decoarted framing Scroll-pattern tiles with special border painted for the Palace Green commission are the only know examples painted at Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Co. All other examples of the pattern, and many variations, are Dutch-made.
Associated object
CIRC.531-1962 (Ensemble)
Bibliographic references
  • Parry, Linda (ed.), William Morris London : Philip Wilson, 1996 K.2, p.186
  • Myers, Richard and Hilary, William Morris Tiles:The Tile Designs of Morris and his Fellow-Workers, (Shepton Beauchamp: Richard Dennis, 1996)., pp.78-79. ill. p.91
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.530-1962

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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