Plate
ca. 1756 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Object Type
The Bow porcelain factory often decorated its tea and coffee wares with transfer prints, and the small size and application of transfer-printing here may mean that this plate was made to accompany a tea or coffee service. If so, it would probably have been used to serve up cakes or bread and butter, as can be seen in 18th-century paintings of tea parties. The gap between breakfast and dinner increased during the second half of the 18th century (dinner was pushed from early afternoon to around five o'clock), so a snack of bread and butter or cakes would have been a welcome addition to afternoon tea. The tea itself was usually prepared by the lady of the house.
Materials & Making
Although the Bow factory concentrated on utilitarian pieces, it made comparatively few transfer-printed wares, possibly because the printed image all too easily sank into the soft-lead glaze. The printing here is unusually crisp. Sets of 'printed teas' are mentioned in a factory document of 1756.
The Bow porcelain factory often decorated its tea and coffee wares with transfer prints, and the small size and application of transfer-printing here may mean that this plate was made to accompany a tea or coffee service. If so, it would probably have been used to serve up cakes or bread and butter, as can be seen in 18th-century paintings of tea parties. The gap between breakfast and dinner increased during the second half of the 18th century (dinner was pushed from early afternoon to around five o'clock), so a snack of bread and butter or cakes would have been a welcome addition to afternoon tea. The tea itself was usually prepared by the lady of the house.
Materials & Making
Although the Bow factory concentrated on utilitarian pieces, it made comparatively few transfer-printed wares, possibly because the printed image all too easily sank into the soft-lead glaze. The printing here is unusually crisp. Sets of 'printed teas' are mentioned in a factory document of 1756.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Soft-paste porcelain, transfer-printed and enamelled |
Brief description | E, P, BOW, 18 |
Physical description | PLATE depicting a scene from Virgil's 'Aeneid' |
Dimensions |
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Gallery label |
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Credit line | Bequeathed by Mr Arthur Hurst |
Object history | Made at the Bow porcelain factory, London |
Subject depicted | |
Place depicted | |
Literary reference | Virgil's 'Aeneid' |
Summary | Object Type The Bow porcelain factory often decorated its tea and coffee wares with transfer prints, and the small size and application of transfer-printing here may mean that this plate was made to accompany a tea or coffee service. If so, it would probably have been used to serve up cakes or bread and butter, as can be seen in 18th-century paintings of tea parties. The gap between breakfast and dinner increased during the second half of the 18th century (dinner was pushed from early afternoon to around five o'clock), so a snack of bread and butter or cakes would have been a welcome addition to afternoon tea. The tea itself was usually prepared by the lady of the house. Materials & Making Although the Bow factory concentrated on utilitarian pieces, it made comparatively few transfer-printed wares, possibly because the printed image all too easily sank into the soft-lead glaze. The printing here is unusually crisp. Sets of 'printed teas' are mentioned in a factory document of 1756. |
Bibliographic reference | Guy-Jones, Gordon & Sue. Bow Porcelain, On-glaze Prints and their Sources. English Ceramics Circle, 2013. For this design see no. 3, the original drawing by Gravelot is given fig. 3C and the print which is the source for this design on Bow, published in The Compleat Drawing Book, 1762 is fig. 3B. |
Collection | |
Accession number | C.217-1940 |
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Record created | March 27, 2003 |
Record URL |
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