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1920s Daisy Makeig-Jones Wedgwood Creamware Bowl

$4,250
£3,237.85
€3,733.37
CA$5,947.79
A$6,645.66
CHF 3,476.42
MX$81,497.13
NOK 44,422.03
SEK 42,123.85
DKK 27,864.15
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About the Item

A Wedgwood Queensware bowl designed by Daisy Makeig-Jones in the Istria pattern after an ancient Greek vase from Sir William Hamilton’s collection. This ‘Istria’ pattern bowl by Wedgwood designer Daisy Makeig-Jones is quite a departure from her typical body of work. The pattern’s restrained, geometric pattern of Attic animals and simplified color palette bears no resemblance to her boldly polychromatic and fantastical Ordinary and Fairyland Lustre lines. The pattern is taken from an Ancient Greek vase from the 18th-century collection of Sir William Hamilton (presently in the collection of the British Museum). The original vase, a black-figure ware pyxis, is a circa 590 BC-570 BC transitional Corinthian piece, a period which is categorized by Middle Eastern influences and depictions of animals over human figures. The design on the pyxis is identical to the one seen here (though with a different color scheme): panthers and goats grazing in a field of flowers. But how did this design arrive from an ancient vase to the 1920s English market? In the 1760s, Sir William Hamilton oversaw a massive excavation of Ancient Greek and Roman pottery just outside of Naples. The collection was immortalized in a Catalogue by Pierre d’Hancarville to serve as a source of inspiration for English artists and designers, who readily copied the Ancient motifs onto their own work. Josiah Wedgwood I, who was a close friend of Hamilton, added a catalog to the factory library, and it was from that very catalog that Daisy copied the animals of the ‘Istria’ pattern. Daisy continued the Wedgwood factory tradition of copying designs from Sir William Hamilton’s catalog. Since acquiring the catalog in the 1760s, the factory reprinted Hamilton designs on plates, bowls, candlesticks, and more; they even created a line of replica Antique vases. Hamilton’s catalog, and Daisy’s present use of it in this bowl, illustrates a long tradition of the importance of the copy in British design. Only in the 20th century did the notion of the copy become a nefarious one. Traditionally, the copy was either seen as artistic homage, or simply an existing model that was to be used for the convenience of designers and artists. Dimensions: 9 in. Dm x 4 1/4 in. H Condition: Very good. Minor area of glaze wear to rim measuring approximately 1 cm. Tiny hairline across bowl rim measuring 0.8 cm. Some scattered, almost invisible scratching to well of bowl. Provenance: Collection of Dr. Ellis F. Rubin and Suzanne Borow Rubin Earl Buckman References: Design taken from British Museum 1772,0320.497 Pierre d’Hancarville, Collection of Etruscan, Greek and Roman antiquities from the cabinet of the Honourable William Hamilton (Naples: 1766), design illustrated vol. II pl. 119. Literature: Una des Fontaines, Wedgwood Fairyland Lustre: the Work of Daisy-Makeig Jones (New York: Born-Hawes, 1975), pp. 231-232, fig.103.
  • Creator:
    Daisy Makeig-Jones (Designer),Wedgwood (Manufacturer)
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 4.25 in (10.8 cm)Diameter: 9 in (22.86 cm)
  • Style:
    Greek Revival (In the Style Of)
  • Materials and Techniques:
  • Place of Origin:
  • Period:
  • Date of Manufacture:
    circa 1923
  • Condition:
    Wear consistent with age and use. Very good. Minor area of glaze wear to rim measuring approximately 1 cm. Tiny hairline across bowl rim measuring 0.8 cm. Some scattered, almost invisible scratching to well of bowl.
  • Seller Location:
    Fort Lauderdale, FL
  • Reference Number:
    Seller: 2024.4.21stDibs: LU5643242044402

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