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Mug
Cambrian Pottery (Established in Swansea in 1764, the Cambrian Pottery reached its creative peak under the proprietorship of Lewis Weston Dillwyn (1778-1855), who ran the Pottery (with a break between 1817 and 1824) from 1802 to 1836. Lewis Weston Dillwyn was a natural scientist, antiquarian, Member of Parliament, magistrate and landowner whose intellectual interests drove the Cambrian Pottery to become one of the most ambitious and artistically accomplished British potteries of the early 19th century. While the porcelain manufactured in Swansea between 1814 and 1825 justifies its reputation as among the finest of British porcelains, the pottery produced under Dillwyn’s ownership between 1802 and about 1809 was at its best an equally impressive achievement, most particularly that made for sale in the Pottery’s Cambrian Warehouse in London 1806-1808, the context for which this supper service was most likely created.)
Mug, earthenware, standing on a rounded spreading foot-rim with an incised ring around the top of it, tall cylindrical sides, plain loop handle with foliate moulding to the upper and lower terminals, to the front of the body opposite the handle is a moulded decoration of a scroll, a crown and a cross with the inscription "IMPERIAL" impressed on the scroll; decorated with to the body a very broad band of underglaze brown with narrower bands of underglaze blue above and below it, two mocha decorations of spreading, feathery bush-like shapes in brown to either side of the body.
Collection Area
Art
Item Number
NMW A 30460
Creation/Production
Cambrian Pottery
Date: 1850 ca
Acquisition
Bequest, 1965
Measurements
Height
(cm): 15.7
diam
(cm): 12.1
Width
(cm): 16
Height
(in): 6
diam
(in): 4
Width
(in): 6
Techniques
wheel-thrown
forming
Applied Art
press-moulded
forming
Applied Art
assembled
forming
Applied Art
mocha
decoration
Applied Art
Material
earthenware
glaze
Location
In store
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