Pottery through the Ages
Tile Frieze
1939 (made)
1939 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Between 1939 and 1978, this impressive frieze, depicting 'Pottery Through the Ages', graced the frontage of Doulton House, which stood at the junction of Albert Embankment and Lambeth Bridge, London. This headquarters office for the well-known ceramics manufacturer was designed by the architect T.P. Bennett (1887-1980) in modernist style and faced with cream, black and gold ceramic panels. Royal Doulton commissioned Gilbert Bayes (1872-1953), President of the Royal Society of British Sculptors, to design this frieze, considered his ceramic masterpiece, as well as another smaller one for the same building which illustrated the arrival of Dutch potters in London. Bayes was an esteemed, versatile and prolific sculptor of public works including figures and memorials, especially in the interwar years. He modelled the Portland stone figures of Sir William Chambers and Sir Charles Barry on the facade of the V&A and is now best-known for his 'Queen of Time' clock over the entrance of Selfridge's department store, Oxford Street, London.
The two friezes from Doulton House were salvaged by Ironbridge Gorge Museum, thanks to the initiative of Paul Atterbury, then head of Royal Doulton's historical department and now a well-known author and antiques specialist. The 'Dutch Potters' frieze remains at Ironbridge, while Royal Doulton presented the 'Pottery Through the Ages' frieze to the V&A.
The two friezes from Doulton House were salvaged by Ironbridge Gorge Museum, thanks to the initiative of Paul Atterbury, then head of Royal Doulton's historical department and now a well-known author and antiques specialist. The 'Dutch Potters' frieze remains at Ironbridge, while Royal Doulton presented the 'Pottery Through the Ages' frieze to the V&A.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Titles |
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Materials and techniques | Stoneware with coloured high-temperature glazes |
Brief description | Stoneware frieze with coloured glazes, designed and modelled by Gilbert Bayes, made by Doulton & Co., Lambeth, 1939, for the front of Doulton House, Albert Embankment |
Physical description | Rectangular frieze of stoneware glazed in various colours, depicting an allegorical history of pottery, divided into eight cultural epochs: Egypt, Assyria, Persia, The Orient (at the centre), Renaissance Italy, Crete, Greece, Phoenicia and Rome. |
Dimensions |
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Production type | Unique |
Gallery label |
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Credit line | Given by Royal Doulton |
Object history | See Ceramics and Glass Section: Object Information file for 'Gilbert Bayes and the Doulton House Frieze', a publicity handout published by Royal Doulton, 1988, and other papers. |
Summary | Between 1939 and 1978, this impressive frieze, depicting 'Pottery Through the Ages', graced the frontage of Doulton House, which stood at the junction of Albert Embankment and Lambeth Bridge, London. This headquarters office for the well-known ceramics manufacturer was designed by the architect T.P. Bennett (1887-1980) in modernist style and faced with cream, black and gold ceramic panels. Royal Doulton commissioned Gilbert Bayes (1872-1953), President of the Royal Society of British Sculptors, to design this frieze, considered his ceramic masterpiece, as well as another smaller one for the same building which illustrated the arrival of Dutch potters in London. Bayes was an esteemed, versatile and prolific sculptor of public works including figures and memorials, especially in the interwar years. He modelled the Portland stone figures of Sir William Chambers and Sir Charles Barry on the facade of the V&A and is now best-known for his 'Queen of Time' clock over the entrance of Selfridge's department store, Oxford Street, London. The two friezes from Doulton House were salvaged by Ironbridge Gorge Museum, thanks to the initiative of Paul Atterbury, then head of Royal Doulton's historical department and now a well-known author and antiques specialist. The 'Dutch Potters' frieze remains at Ironbridge, while Royal Doulton presented the 'Pottery Through the Ages' frieze to the V&A. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | C.61-1988 |
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Record created | October 20, 1998 |
Record URL |
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