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Chinese Potter's Wheel

Stained Glass Design
Artist/Maker

As carried out during the late 1860s and 1870s, the interior of the Lecture Theatre block of the Victoria and Albert Museum - containing the Lecture Theatre, Ceramic Gallery (now the Silver Gallery, Rooms 65-69) and refreshment rooms - was elaborately decorated. This etching records part of one of William Bell Scott’s designs for the fourteen stained-glass windows in the Ceramic Gallery. Henry Cole, the first director of the Museum, was responsible for the theme: mirroring the arrangement of ceramic items within the gallery, the stained-glass windows depicted historical periods of ceramic manufacture. The design seen here belongs to the window representing Chinese ceramic production (see also 8099.4 and E.7168-1903). Scott executed the designs by painting onto glass panes with a brush, keeping the windows virtually free of colour (yellow being the only stain used) so as not to darken the gallery. Scott also designed two stained-glass windows for the landings of the two staircases leading up from the Ceramic Gallery to the Lecture Theatre.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleChinese Potter's Wheel
Materials and techniques
Etching on paper
Brief description
Design, 'Chinese Potter's Wheel', Ceramic Gallery, stained glass window for Victoria and Albert Museum, etching on paper, William Bell Scott
Physical description
Etching on paper, after William Bell Scott’s design for the upper right light of one of the stained-glass windows in the Ceramic Gallery (now the Silver Gallery, Rooms 65-69). The light belongs to the window representing Chinese ceramic manufacture (see also 8099.4 and E.7169-1903). Populated by small figures and enclosed within a decorative border, it show pots being formed by seated figures and their assistants (background) and fired in a large circular kiln (foreground).
Dimensions
  • Height: 21.8cm
  • Width: 11.5cm
Place depicted
Summary
As carried out during the late 1860s and 1870s, the interior of the Lecture Theatre block of the Victoria and Albert Museum - containing the Lecture Theatre, Ceramic Gallery (now the Silver Gallery, Rooms 65-69) and refreshment rooms - was elaborately decorated. This etching records part of one of William Bell Scott’s designs for the fourteen stained-glass windows in the Ceramic Gallery. Henry Cole, the first director of the Museum, was responsible for the theme: mirroring the arrangement of ceramic items within the gallery, the stained-glass windows depicted historical periods of ceramic manufacture. The design seen here belongs to the window representing Chinese ceramic production (see also 8099.4 and E.7168-1903). Scott executed the designs by painting onto glass panes with a brush, keeping the windows virtually free of colour (yellow being the only stain used) so as not to darken the gallery. Scott also designed two stained-glass windows for the landings of the two staircases leading up from the Ceramic Gallery to the Lecture Theatre.
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
Physick, John. The Victoria and Albert Museum: The History of Its Building. London: The Victoria & Albert Museum, 1982.
Collection
Accession number
E.7169-1903

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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