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Food warmer
Linthorpe Art Pottery
Designer:
Dresser, Christopher
(Probably)
Pottery manager:
Tooth, Henry
Moulded earthenware with incised decoration and honey-brown glaze.
Hollow ,closed bowl, approximately hemispherical with a concave upper surface. The sides are decorated with incised, floriated scrolls below which are three incised, horizontal bands. On the upper surface an incised floral spray is enclosed by two concentric bands and a continuous wavy line border which has stylised leaves on either side of it. The whole surface is covered with a honey brown glaze which has crazed, perhaps with age. The underside is recessed, with a circular aperture in the centre.
History note: Haslam & Whiteway, 105 Kensington High Street, London, W.8.
Purchased with the Applied Arts Duplicates Fund.
Diameter: 20.5 cm
Diameter: 8.125 in
Height: 10.5 cm
Height: 4.25 in
Method of acquisition: Bought (1980) by Haslam & Whiteway
19th Century, Late#
Victorian
Circa
1879
CE
-
1882
CE
Christopher Dresser (1834-1904) was Art Director at Linthorpe from 1879 until 1882. He recruited Henry Tooth as the pottery’s manager, until in 1883 Tooth left to form Bretby Art Pottery, in Derbyshire. Dresser himself was not based at the pottery, but supplied designs and suggestions on form and colour. A Linthorpe prospectus, c.1880, suggests his name was as important to the pottery as his practical input and notes that Dresser’s impressed mark was included on all Linthorpe wares as ‘a guarantee of their genuineness, and of their being made in strict accordance with the principles of decorative Art’. Dresser preferred simple thrown shapes and decoration, aiming to ‘work the material in a simple and befitting manner’, such that ‘satisfactory results are bound to accrue’. Originally trained as a botanist, he maintained a strong interest in botanic design, and held professorships in both scientific and art botany. In 1879, with Charles Holme, he established Dresser & Holme, to import Japanese and oriental wares; and in 1880 he became ‘art manager’ of the Art Furnishers’ Alliance, a body established by a number of leading manufacturers to promote the manufacture and sale of ‘high class goods of artistic design’.
Linthorpe Art Pottery was set up by John Harrison in Middlesborough, in 1879, both to produce innovative art wares and to provide employment for 100 local people. The pottery initially used the same local red clay as a brickworks formerly on the same site, though later imported white clays from Cornwall. It was one of the first 19th Century potteries to use gas fired kilns and to successfully use glazes as decoration in their own right. Linthorpe supplied Liberty’s and other major outlets, but closed when Harrison died in 1889.
This piece is assumed to be a food warmer (ie, for use would be filled with hot water and a bung inserted in the vent hole).
Decoration
honey-brown
Glaze
Earthenware
Moulding : Earthenware with incised decoration under a honey-brown glaze.
Inscription present: facsimile script signature
Inscription present: in monogram
Accession number: C.18-1980
Primary reference Number: 72701
Stable URI
Owner or interested party:
The Fitzwilliam Museum
Associated department:
Applied Arts
This record can be cited in the Harvard Bibliographic style using the text below:
The Fitzwilliam Museum (2024) "Food warmer" Web page available at: https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/72701 Accessed: 2024-11-05 08:06:20
To cite this record on Wikipedia you can use this code snippet:
{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/72701
|title=Food warmer
|author=The Fitzwilliam Museum|accessdate=2024-11-05 08:06:20|publisher=The
University of Cambridge}}
To call these data via our API (remember this needs to be authenticated) you can use this code snippet:
https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/api/v1/objects/object-72701
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<div class="text-center"> <figure class="figure"> <img src="https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/imagestore/aa/aa3/C_18_1980_281_29.jpg" alt="Food warmer" class="img-fluid" /> <figcaption class="figure-caption text-info">Food warmer</figcaption> </figure> </div>
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