Featured Battered but not something you see every day

Discussion in 'Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain' started by John Brassey, Mar 11, 2021.

  1. John Brassey

    John Brassey Well-Known Member

    I had my eye on this large ewer for four or five months but didn’t take the plunge firstly because I didn’t know the maker and secondly because the damage was too much for the price.

    The seller finally cut the price and I bought it and have finally managed to identify it. Anybody want to have a stab just for fun?

    8238960E-C942-460E-A127-42DF33758D1A.jpeg 479288B7-6B53-4F88-975E-59E22D1D4767.jpeg 074F3C91-B149-4804-8EBA-575F9BFDB751.jpeg
    CD8A1F70-28CB-4449-812E-D20875B4B63F.jpeg
     
    Rosie1510, Ce BCA, KSW and 5 others like this.
  2. ola402

    ola402 Well-Known Member

    John, you must just LOVE pottery to have rescued this ewer. I always click into your posts to see what weird (to me) pottery you've recently found. To me, the mark looks Asian, but IDK.
     
  3. Lucille.b

    Lucille.b Well-Known Member

    Guessing quite old, that's all I got. Following this thread...
     
    KSW and ulilwitch like this.
  4. John Brassey

    John Brassey Well-Known Member

    Antique but not ancient. Probably c1880
     
    Figtree3, KSW and ulilwitch like this.
  5. John Brassey

    John Brassey Well-Known Member

    There’s a big clue to its origin in the handle.
     
    KSW and ulilwitch like this.
  6. ola402

    ola402 Well-Known Member

    I thought maybe a dragon, but my eyes are kinda bad right now. Then I saw a squirrel howling at the moon so I decided not to comment on the handle in my original response, lol! Mexican? No, Italy.
     
  7. ulilwitch

    ulilwitch Well-Known Member

    Is it a sphinx?
     
  8. blooey

    blooey Well-Known Member

    It smacks of the Ruskin/William Morris mentality to me so probably one of the English art potters of the era?
     
    Tanya, Figtree3 and KSW like this.
  9. Ownedbybear

    Ownedbybear Well-Known Member

    Hm. Linthorpe?
     
    KSW likes this.
  10. John Brassey

    John Brassey Well-Known Member

    Lots of great suggestions. Blooey is on the right lines in terms of style. Here's a clue. The animal is a tiger.
     
    Figtree3 and KSW like this.
  11. Ce BCA

    Ce BCA Well-Known Member

    Any Jewelry and KSW like this.
  12. John Brassey

    John Brassey Well-Known Member

    Yes. I am fairly confident that it is a piece from The Bombay School Of Art I haven't found a great deal about it but it seems that some of the potters were English and potted in the style seen in England at the likes of Della Robbia in the late 19th century. Searches for Bombay School Of Art bring up quite a few similarly decorated pieces.
     
  13. John Brassey

    John Brassey Well-Known Member

    This from the V& A website.

    The Bombay School of Art, whose ceramic productions were traded under the name of Wonderland Art Pottery under the direction of George Wilkins Terry, who had been appointed as its first drawing master in 1857. The pottery flourished from the mid 1870s until about 1890, but limped on after Terry's retirement at that time into the early years of the 20th century. Early wares were influenced by those manufactured in Sind as Terry set up his workshop with a Sindhi craftsman called Nur Muhammad. Soon, however, much of the decoration came to be influenced by the cave paintings at Ajanta, and were copied by the Schools students over a period lasting from 1872-1885. The ceramic students also adapted Ajanta motifs, as here, in an attempt by the School to encourage traditions of Indian art rather than European ones. Liberty imported some of the Wonderland wares to sell in its Regent Street shop in London
     
    Figtree3, patd8643, kentworld and 2 others like this.
  14. Ce BCA

    Ce BCA Well-Known Member

    Ah, nice. I think Indian Della Robbia sums it up perfectly.
     
  15. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    Very informative. I know just a little about ceramics and always enjoy learning here.
     
    John Brassey likes this.
  16. Ownedbybear

    Ownedbybear Well-Known Member

    And there I was, leafing through the Doulton Bible today, which has very similar flowers on some late nineteenth pieces. I do love the networkin of pots.
     
    Figtree3, Tanya and John Brassey like this.
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