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Moorcroft Pottery

William Moorcroft (1872–1945), the founder of the celebrated British art-pottery company that shares his last name, was both an aesthete and a technical innovator. Along with William de Morgan, he is regarded as one of the greatest ceramists of the Arts and Crafts movement, yet Moorcroft’s singular style is heavily inflected with the lush naturalism of the Art Nouveau school of art and design.

The son of a decorative pottery painter, Moorcroft was born in Staffordshire, the center of English ceramics-making, studied at the Wedgwood Institute and in 1897 joined the local pottery manufacturer James Macintyre & Co. as a designer. After a year, he was put in charge of the company’s art-pottery studio, and there he developed a new style of wares named “Florian,” made with a technique called tube-lining, or slip-trailing. In this method, decorative motifs are outlined with a thin, raised border produced by piping a thread of clay onto the body of a vessel — much like squeezing toothpaste from a tube.

Moorcroft, who took the unusual step of signing his ceramics, would go on to win numerous international awards. In 1913, backed by the London department store Liberty & Co., he left Macintyre to open his own workshop. Queen Mary, wife of King George V, gave Moorcroft her Royal Warrant in 1928. Shortly before he died in 1945, his son, Walter Moorcroft (1917–2002), took over as head of the firm. The pottery company is still in business in Staffordshire, with a design department headed by Rachel Bishop.

William Moorcroft’s ceramics are noted for their colorful, ebullient (and often slightly surreal) decorations depicting stylized natural forms — flowers, toadstools, fruit (pomegranate is a favorite among collectors), insects and landscapes. Most Moorcroft wares are finished with a glossy overglaze. Blue-and-white and pastel shades were generally used as underglazes on early Moorcroft pieces, and he later developed a rich, ruddy background glaze he called “flambé.”

Moorcroft art pottery has a rich, warm and inviting look — a comforting aesthetic that explains their enduring appeal.

Find antique and vintage Moorcroft pottery, vases, serveware and more on 1stDibs.

Moorcroft Arts & Crafts Miniature Red Mottled Glaze Pottery Bowl
By Moorcroft Pottery
Located in Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire
A very fine English Arts & Crafts art pottery miniature bowl decorated with mottled red lustre style glazes by renowned makers Moorcroft and dating from around 1905. The bowl is pa...
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Early 1900s English Arts and Crafts Antique Moorcroft Pottery

Materials

Ceramic

MOORCROFT LARGE POMEGRANATE pattern Vase circa 1916
By Moorcroft Pottery
Located in Richmond Hill, ON
This exquisite vase boasts a stunning pomegranate pattern that dates back to circa 1916/1918. With a restored rim and standing tall at 39 cm, this piece is sure to impress. The vase ...
Category

1910s English Art Deco Vintage Moorcroft Pottery

Materials

Pottery

Modern MOORCROFT Meknes Pattern 576/9 Vase, designed by Beverley Wilkes numbered
By Moorcroft Pottery
Located in Richmond Hill, ON
A Modern Moorcroft Meknes Pattern 576/9 Vase, designed by Beverley Wilkes, impressed and painted factory marks, numbered 66/350, underglaze and gold pen. Lovely Moorcroft Arabic ‘Mek...
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1990s English Art Nouveau Moorcroft Pottery

Materials

Pottery

MOORCROFT art pottery Rachel Bishop Design PARRAMORE LARGE Vase, 2002 .
By Moorcroft Pottery
Located in Richmond Hill, ON
MOORCROFT art pottery Rachel Bishop Design PARRAMORE LARGE Vase, 2002 of baluster-form. Description: Incredible Art Pottery from Moorcroft by Rachel Bish...
Category

Early 2000s English Arts and Crafts Moorcroft Pottery

Materials

Ceramic

MOORCROFT Pottery PHOENIX pattern vase, designed by Rachel Bishop 1996 BOXED
By Moorcroft Pottery
Located in Richmond Hill, ON
A Moorcroft Pottery Phoenix pattern vase, designed by Rachel Bishop, circa 1997, of squat form with slender neck, painted and impressed factory marks, and gilt inscribed signature to...
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21st Century and Contemporary English Art Nouveau Moorcroft Pottery

Materials

Ceramic

MOORCROFT Blue Heaven TRIAL vase, by Nicola Slaney dated 4.11.09 BOXED
By Moorcroft Pottery
Located in Richmond Hill, ON
Moorcroft Pottery 'Blue Heaven' vase, TRIAL VASE, dated 04.11.09 This beautiful vase is decorated with the Blue Heaven design by Nicola Slaney. Blue Heaven is an Art Nouveau-inspired...
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Early 2000s British Art Nouveau Moorcroft Pottery

Materials

Ceramic

LIMITED EDITION Moorcroft Green Iris vase, from the Legacy collection dated 2013
By Moorcroft Pottery
Located in Richmond Hill, ON
A contemporary Moorcroft Green Iris pattern slender tapering cylindrical vase, 2013 Centennial Relaunch of William Moorcroft's 1913 design. From the Legacy collection. Dated 2013, nu...
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21st Century and Contemporary English Art Nouveau Moorcroft Pottery

Materials

Ceramic

LIMITED EDITION MOORCROFT Wapiti vase by Emma Bossons dated 2012 31/35
By Moorcroft Pottery
Located in Richmond Hill, ON
Designed by Emma Bossons and issued in a Limited Edition of only 35 Worldwide, as part of the 2012 Number 31 Collection catalogue. It is signed underglaze to the base by the designer...
Category

2010s English Arts and Crafts Moorcroft Pottery

Materials

Ceramic

Browse all Furniture from Moorcroft Pottery
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Moorcroft Pottery furniture for sale on 1stDibs.

Moorcroft Pottery furniture are available for sale on 1stDibs. These distinctive items are frequently made of ceramic and are designed with extraordinary care. There are many options to choose from in our collection of Moorcroft Pottery furniture, although brown editions of this piece are particularly popular. We have 43 vintage editions of these items in-stock, while there is 1 modern edition to choose from as well. Many of the original furniture by Moorcroft Pottery were created in the Arts and Crafts style in united kingdom during the 20th century. If you’re looking for additional options, many customers also consider furniture by William Moorcroft, Archibald Knox, and William Hair Haseler. Prices for Moorcroft Pottery furniture can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — on 1stDibs, these items begin at $186 and can go as high as $6,885, while a piece like these, on average, fetch $940.

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