Thursday, 3 May 2012

A quiet word from the List Mistress - William de Morgan lustre ware bowl

Collection of the Carrick Hill Trust, Adelaide; Haywood Bequest.


Accession No: C1983/436

This large gleaming lustre ware bowl catches my eye every time I walk into the Music Room where it usually sits centre stage on a carved Georgian oak pedestal side table 
Although this bowl is not physically marked it is unmistakably the design style of William de Morgan (1839-1917) one of the great practitioners of the English Arts and Crafts movement.  William de Morgan was a member of the Pre-Raphaelite circle and a personal friend of William Morris and he began working for Morris as a designer and painter not long after the establishment of the Morris & Co. company in the 1860s.  William de Morgan is mainly known for his wonderfully bold and dynamic ceramic designs, in particular hand painted tiles, but he was as a designer of stained glass and a painter of furniture panels.   

I find it interesting to reflect on the fact that Ursula Hayward’s paternal grandmother, Joanna Barr Smith had furnished her large family homes almost exclusively with Morris textiles – carpets, curtains, embroideries plus wallpapers and other decorative arts objects.  Many of these items are now in the permanent collection of the Art Gallery of South Australia and the young Ursula would have been familiar with the look of the many Arts and Crafts style objects that would have been on display in these houses.   

William de Morgan is credited as being the first of the English potters to rediscover the secrets of antique lustre effects but he was a primarily a designer and decorator rather than a hands-on potter so the undecorated bowl may have been actually been produced as a blank by another factory.  The earthenware body is covered with a beautiful ruby lustre glaze on an ivory ground and features a frieze of 5 large seated boars surrounded by de Morgan’s typically stylized leaf and floral motifs, the inside of the bowl is undecorated.  This bowl may have been decorated and fired at the Sands End Pottery at Fulham, London that de Morgan had moved to in 1888 or perhaps this was done at one of the other top art potteries that abounded in the area at that time.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City has a large covered vase worked in a similar style however their vase is rather more exotic than this one as it features an all-over design of bold, sinuous mythical beasts and  stylized foliage.  

link to blog: http://victorianpeeper.blogspot.com.au/2007/07/victorian-things-vase-by-william-de.html

References:

The William de Morgan Foundation, London http://www.demorgan.org.uk/collection


British Pottery: An Illustrated Guide by Geoffrey A Godden pub. Barrie & Jenkins Ltd, London, 1974 p.223-226

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