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Title: Rye Pottery Trug
Reference: 01058
Description: A large Trug from Rye Pottery, showing great attention to detail. Pottery has been produced in Rye since mediaeval times, but what is now known as Rye Pottery was started at Cadborough near the end of the eighteenth century. Cadborough established the ?Hopware? design that is now recognized as traditional for Rye Pottery.
In the second half of the nineteenth century the Bellevue Pottery opened in Rye, and by 1890 the Cadborough Pottery was swallowed by the thriving Bellvue Pottery. Bellvue was run by Frederick Mitchell until his death in 1875 and by his wife, Caroline, until Frederick Thomas Mitchell, their newphew, took over in the last decade of the nineteenth century.
Incised mark to base.
Dimensions: L: 21cm (8.25") W: 15cm (6")
Price: £395 |
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Title: Ruskin Matt Glazed Vase
Reference: 00746
Description: A Ruskin Orange matt glazed Art Pottery Vase. The Ruskin Pottery was founded in 1898 in Smethwick, Birmingham by Edward Richard Taylor, then in in 1912, Taylor's son, William Howson Taylor, took over the running of the Pottery, and continued to work towards the same creative ideals as his father. Ruskin Pottery is noted for its remarkable and individual glazes developed by Taylor who drew inspiration from oriental techniques. The qualities of the wares produced make Ruskin Pottery some of the most original and desirable work available. Impressed mark to base.
c. 1930-33
Dimensions: H: 15cm (6") D(at base): 13cm (5")
Price: £180 |
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Title: Martin Brothers Dish
Reference: 01068
Description: A unique Martin Brothers Art Pottery dish by Robert Wallace Martin, with carved, etched and impressed decoration.
The Martin Brothers pottery was founded by the eldest of the group, Robert Wallace Martin (1843�1923), who had trained in sculpture at Lambeth School of Art and later at the Royal Academy of Art. He set up his first workshop in the late 1860�s, making terracotta sculpture. In 1873, he set up a new pottery with his brothers, Charles, Walter and Edwin Martin in Fulham. In 1877 they moved to Southall, where they made salt-glazed stoneware with Gothic Revival influences. The Martin Brothers became famous for their eccentric, grotesquely modeled �Wally Birds�, wheel-thrown and sculpted face jugs, vases. The company closed in 1915.
Incised mark to base.
c.1873-1874
Dimensions: D: 10cm (4")
Price: £950 |
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Title: Ruskin Lamp Base
Reference: 00747
Description: A Ruskin Art Pottery lamp base with a banded, crystalline glaze.
The Ruskin Pottery was founded in 1898 in Smethwick, Birmingham by Edward Richard Taylor, then in in 1912, Taylor's son, William Howson Taylor, took over the running of the Pottery, and continued to work towards the same creative ideals as his father.
Ruskin Pottery is noted for its remarkable and individual glazes developed by Taylor who drew inspiration from oriental techniques. The qualities of the wares produced make Ruskin Pottery some of the most original and desirable work available.
Impressed Ruskin, England mark. c. 1920's
Dimensions: H: 18cm (7")
Price: SOLD |
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Title: Ruskin Vase
Reference: 00326
Description: A delightful green glazed Ruskin Vase. The Ruskin Pottery was founded in 1898 in Smethwick, Birmingham. The founder, Edward Richard Taylor, named his pottery after John Ruskin, the Victorian writer and art critic. In 1912, Taylor's son, William Howson Taylor, took over the running of the Ruskin Pottery. The company experimented with glazes, producing results that were quite different from anything seen before. The recipes for the glazes were kept secret, and when the pottery closed in 1933 William Howson Taylor made sure all records of glaze recipes were destroyed so that they would never be reproduced. Although small in scale, Ruskin Pottery was one of the leading exponents of British art pottery in the early twentieth century.
Impressed Mark. C.1933
Dimensions: H: 13cm (5")
Price: SOLD |
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Title: Doulton Lambeth Candleholder
Reference: 00503
Description: A stunning Doulton Lambeth saltglazed, stoneware candleholder with incised and applied decoration.
This candleholder could possibly be by George Tinworth, however there is only the incised initials of an assistant along with the Doulton Lambeth mark on the base.
c.1877
Dimensions: h: 20cm (8") W: (at base) 12cm (5")
Price: SOLD |
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Title: Elton Ware Slipware Vase
Reference: 00504
Description: An Elton Ware earthenware vase with a raised flower pattern, blue, green and brown drip glaze and a serrated rim. Sir Edmund Elton, a self-taught potter started the Sunflower Pottery, which produced the Art Pottery known as Elton Ware, in 1881.
Dimensions: H: 10.5cm (4")
Price: £148 |
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Title: Pilkingtons Cream Glazed Vase
Reference: 00074
Description: An unusual curved Pilkingtons cream glazed Art Pottery vase. Printed mark to base. c.1904-05.
Dimensions: H: 14cm (5.5") W: 15cm (5.75") at widest point
Price: SOLD |
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Title: Martin Brothers Art Pottery Stoneware Vase
Reference: 00323
Description: A rare c.1874 Robert Wallace Martin Stoneware Art Pottery vase with carved, etched and impressed decoration.
Inscribed to base R W Martin Fulham.
Dimensions: H:9cm (3.5") W:8cm (3.2")
Price: SOLD |
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Title: Pilkingtons Royal Lancastrian Art Pottery Vase
Reference: 00203
Description: A Pilkingtons Royal Lancastrian Art Pottery Vase. Decorated in a bright mottled orange glaze. Identified by model number 2918. Impressed Mark to base. c.1914-1920.
Dimensions: 30cm (12") high
Price: SOLD |
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