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Creamer

Part of the collection: English stoneware – Wedgwood

Popularization note

In 1759, Josiah Wedgwood founded a company to produce ceramics. He took care of every detail, the logistics and variety of production, but also the workers and the factory.

The Methodist preacher, John Wesley, visiting Wedgwood's workshop, noted that he met a young man who "planted flowers in the garden by his pottery factory. He also made the men employed in it wash their faces and hands and change their clothes after working at the clay. He is small in stature and has a limp, but his soul is close to God".

The factory owner liked to experiment with new varieties of ceramics. His aim was to obtain "tableware with a new look, covered with a perfect, glossy glaze, able to withstand sudden changes in temperature, easy to make and therefore cheap". These objectives were met and soon the improved, creamy material, perfect for utilitarian and decorative articles, gained popularity.

Fine faience vessels and coloured stoneware were decorated with antique, applied, relief motifs, usually white. Wedgwood relied on the opinion of ladies of the upper classes and even used their designs to create patterns for decorating the pottery. The figures depicted on the vessels were usually inspired by ancient mythology or history. In contrast to the nude depictions of characters known from antiquity, classical standards of decency demanded that the characters in the representations be carefully dressed. One owner of vessels with overly undressed figures wrote: "The bas-reliefs seem very interesting [ ...] if they were at least a little covered, if they were at least wrapped in some thin veil, we could freely show them in company without worrying that we would offend anyone's modesty".

Wedgwood took the recommendations of his discerning audience seriously and as a result his wares featured neatly clad figures. However, the approach was not always rigorous. An example is a cream milk jugn with a beautiful lion-shaped ear and an antique scene on the stem. It depicts two figures - Victoria, tightly covered by a folded robe, while the central figure of Fortune is dressed in a slightly falling gown showing her breasts, and Cupid, holding the walking lion, is completely naked!

Magdalena Norkowska

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

Abington, James Leonard modeler (designer), Wedgwood (?), Label

Dimensions

cały obiekt: width: 10 cm

Object type

dish

Technique

glaze

Material

stoneware

Creation time / dating

1830 — 1840

Creation / finding place

powstanie: England (Europe, UK)

Owner

The National Museum in Lublin

Identification number

S/CS/97/ML

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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