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Earthenware Ceramics

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Color:  Beige
Material: Earthenware
French Wide Majolica Vegetable Serving Platter
Located in LA CIOTAT, FR
An attractive and unusual vintage serving platter, embellished with a central divider of beautifully crafted and hand-painted garden vegetables. A raised, embossed and painted green ...
Category

20th Century French Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Majolica

Delft Polychrome majolica dish with a village view The Netherlands, 1700-1750
Located in ROSSUM, GE
Polychrome dish with a village view. The Netherlands, 1700-1750 The dish has a spreading, slightly raised rim and is painted in blue, purple, yellow and green with a simplified vil...
Category

Early 18th Century Dutch Baroque Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Majolica

Van Hooff Ceramic Vase "Tatu", Rose, Contemporary African, Style, Clay Vessel
Located in Barcelona, ES
Vase model “Tatu” Manufactured by Willem Van Hooff. Exclusively for SIDE. Netherlands, 2023. Earthenware, glazed. Measurements 26 x 9 x 48h cm 10,2 x 3,5 x 18,9h in Prove...
Category

2010s Dutch Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware, Ceramic, Clay

Yellow Vase Faience, Stig Lindberg, Gustavsbergs Studio - Mid-20th Century
Located in Stockholm, SE
A vase in faience designed by Stig Lindberg at Gustavsbergs Studio in Stockholm, it is 13.5 cm (5.4") high and 10 cm (4"). It´s in mint condition. This vase is painted by the faience...
Category

Mid-19th Century Swedish Scandinavian Modern Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Faience

English Butter Dish by Denby Pottery
Located in Bradenton, FL
A modern earthenware English butter dish made by Denby, a traditional English pottery company in the village of Denby, Derbyshire. A traditional re...
Category

Late 20th Century English Modern Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Antique Italian Renaissance Raffaellesco Grotteschi Majolica Wall Charger
Located in Forney, TX
A stunning large antique Italian Raffaellesco majolica wall charger / centerpiece, showcasing exceptionally executed handmade and painted design, dating to the 19th century or earlie...
Category

19th Century Renaissance Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Majolica, Paint

Alfred Powell Wedgwood Creamware Grape Vine Pattern Sauce Tureen
Located in Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire
A fine Wedgwood creamware lidded sauce tureen and stand attributed to Alfred Powell and dating from the early 20th century and probably Art Deco period. ...
Category

20th Century English Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Creamware

Fine English Staffordshire Majolica Lion Handled Tureen Lidded Dish
Located in Forney, TX
A scarce fine quality antique English Staffordshire pottery majolica tureen covered serving dish. Having a fitted lid surmounted with figural reclining lion finial with hand pain...
Category

20th Century English Victorian Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Majolica

Ancient Italian Maiolica Tureen, Rubati Manufacture, Milan, circa 1770-1780
Located in Milano, IT
Maiolica tureen Pasquale Rubati Manufacture Milan, circa 1770 - 1780 Maiolica polychrome decorated “a piccolo fuoco” (third fire). It measures 6.69 in x 11,02 x 8.26 (17 x 28 x ...
Category

1770s Italian Rococo Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

Faience Polychrome Decorated Beer Stein With Pewter Lid and Handle
Located in Bradenton, FL
German Faience pitcher/jug with hinged pewter lid and handle. Hand painted floral design, along with stag and dog, on white background. Top of lid is monogrammed. Has minor wear from...
Category

19th Century German Baroque Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Faience

Britt Louise Sundell, Santos, Gustavsberg
Located in MAASTRICHT, LI
Designer: Britt Louise Sundell Series: Santos Product Description: The Santos-series has been designed by Britt Louise Sundell for Gustavsberg. The artist is most famous for her...
Category

1960s Swedish Vintage Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Six English Turkey Cups and Saucers, Wild Turkey Flying by Johnson Brothers
Located in Austin, TX
A set of six cups and saucers featuring the Wild Turkey - Flying brown and white transfer-ware pattern by the celebrated English pottery firm, Johnson Brothers. With authentic mid...
Category

20th Century English Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware, Pottery

Early 20th Century French Hand-Painted Faience Vasse from Rouen
Located in Verviers, BE
The designs on this French faience group is typical of pottery made in Rouen. Early 20th century French hand-painted Faience vasse from Rouen. Marking on the bottom: "Rouen Fait M...
Category

Early 20th Century French Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Faience

Early 20th Century French Hand-Painted Faience Candlestick from Rouen
Located in Verviers, BE
The designs on this French faience group is typical of pottery made in Rouen. Early 20th Century French Hand-Painted Faience Candlestick from Rouen Marking on the bottom: " Rouen Fa...
Category

Early 20th Century French Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Faience

Contemporary Ceramic Table Lectern Reading Desk Glazed Earthenware Beige
Located in Rubi, Catalunya
Handmade stoneware table lectern manufactured at the workshop of Apparatu in Barcelona. Different clay bodys are mixed with natural fibers like corn, str...
Category

2010s Spanish Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Earthenware, Stoneware

Contemporary Ceramic Table Lectern Reading Desk Glazed Earthenware Caramell
Located in Rubi, Catalunya
Handmade stoneware table lectern manufactured at the workshop of Apparatu in Barcelona. Different clay bodys are mixed with natural fibers like corn, str...
Category

2010s Spanish Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Earthenware, Stoneware

Ancient Italian Coffee Pot, Coppellotti Manufacture, Lodi, Circa 1740
By Antonio Maria Coppellotti
Located in Milano, IT
Coffee pot Antonio Maria Coppellotti Manufacture Lodi, Circa 1740 High fire polychrome maiolica It measures: 7.87 in x 6,49 x 5.11 (20 cm x 16,5 x 13); weight 1.23 lb (561 g) ...
Category

1730s Italian Rococo Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

Set of 6 19th Century Majolica Asparagus Plates, Onnaing Faiencerie
Located in Casteren, Noord-Brabant
Set of 6 majolica asparagus plates. Marked on the bottom, Faïencerie Onnaing. French origin, dated around 1880-1890. In good condition.
Category

1880s French Belle Époque Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Majolica

Rare Large Antique English Early 19th C. Wedgwood Queensware 'Creamware' Bowl
Located in Charleston, SC
Rare & Important Antique English Large Wedgwood Queensware (Creamware) Centerpiece with influences by Robert Adam represented by the swags and fest...
Category

Early 19th Century English George III Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Italian Renaissance Plate, Patanazzi Workshop Urbino, End of 16th Century
Located in Milano, IT
Acquareccia plate Patanazzi workshop Urbino, last quarter of the 16th century It measures diameter 17.12 in; foot diameter 11.53 in; height 1.88 in (43.5 cm; 29.3 cm; 4.8 cm). Weight State of conservation: wear and a few small minimal detachments of enamel, chipping on the raised areas, peeling of enamel at the brim on the back. This large, shallow basin is equipped with a wide and convex well. It is umbonate with a contoured center. The brim, short and flat, is enclosed in a double rounded and barely raised edge. The basin has a flat base without rims; it has a slightly concave center in correspondence to the well. The shape takes inspiration from the basins associated with the metal forged amphora pourers that traditionally adorned the credenza. These were used from the Middle Ages to wash hands during banquets. Two or three people washed their hands in the same basin and it was considered an honor to wash one’s hands with an illustrious person. The decoration is arranged in concentric bands with, in the center of the umbo, an unidentified shield on a blue background: an oval banded in gold with a blue head, a gold star and a field with a burning pitcher. Rings of faux pods separate the center from a series of grotesque motifs of small birds and masks. These go around the basin and are, in fact, faithfully repeated on the brim. The main decoration develops inside the flounce of the basin, which sees alternating symmetrical figures of winged harpies and chimeras. The ornamentation, outlined in orange, green and blue, stands out against the white enamel background. This decorative style, defined since the Renaissance as “grottesche” or “raffaellesche”, refers to the decorations introduced after the discovery of the paintings of the Domus Aurea towards the end of the fifteenth century. The discovery of Nero's palace, buried inside Colle Oppio by damnatio memoriae, occurred by chance when a young Roman, in 1480, fell into a large crack which had opened in the ground on the hill, thus finding himself in a cave with walls covered with painted figures. The great artists present in the papal city, including Pinturicchio, Ghirlandaio, Raffaello, immediately visited these caves. The decorations found there soon became a decorative subject of immense success: the term grotesque , with the meaning of “unusual,” “caricatured,” or “monstrous,” was later commented by Vasari in 1550 as “una spezie di pittura licenziose e ridicole molto”( “a very licentious and ridiculous kind of painting”). The decorations “a grottesche” also widely circulated in ceramic factories, through the use of engravings, variously interpreted according to the creativity of the artists or the requests of the client. Our basin is reflected in similar artifacts produced at the end of the sixteenth century by the factories of the Urbino district. See the series of basins preserved in the main French museums, among which the closest in morphology is that of the Campana collection of the Louvre (Inv. OA1496); this however has a more complex figure decoration, while the decoration of our specimen is sober and with a watercolor style. The style, sure in its execution, approaches decorative results still close to the works produced around the middle of the sixteenth century by the Fontana workshop. The decoration is closely linked to their taste, which later finds its natural outlet, through the work of Antonio, also in the Patanazzi workshop. Studies show the contiguity between the two workshops due to the kinship and collaboration between the masters Orazio Fontana and Antonio Patanazzi, both trained in the workshop of Guido Fontana il Durantino. It is therefore almost natural that their works, often created according to similar typologies and under the aegis of the same commissions, are not always easily distinguishable, so much so that the presence of historiated or “grottesche” works by Orazio is documented and preserved in Antonio Patanazzi's workshop. Given that the studies have always emphasized the collaboration between several hands in the context of the shops, it is known that the most ancient “grottesche” works thus far known, can be dated from 1560, when the Fontana shop created the so-called Servizio Spagnolo (Spanish Service) and how, from that moment on, this ornamentation became one of the most requested by high-ranking clients. We remember the works created for the Granduchi di Toscana, when Flaminio Fontana along with his uncle Orazio supplied ceramics to Florence, and, later, other commissions of considerable importance: those for the service of the Duchi d’Este or for the Messina Farmacia of Roccavaldina, associated with the Patanazzi workshop when, now after 1580, Antonio Patanazzi began to sign his own work. Thus, in our basin, the presence of masks hanging from garlands, a theme of more ancient memory, is associated in the work with more advanced stylistic motifs, such as the hatching of the chimeras and harpies. These are found here on the front with the wings painted in two ornate ways. In addition, the theme of the birds on the edge completes the decoration along the thin brim and can be seen as representing an early style typical of the Urbino district during a period of activity and collaboration between the two workshops. Later, a more “doll-like” decorative choice, typical of the end of the century and the beginning of the seventeenth century, characterized the period of the Patanazzi workshop under the direction of Francesco. Bibliography: Philippe Morel, Il funzionamento simbolico e la critica delle grottesche nella seconda metà del Cinquecento, in: Marcello Fagiolo, (a cura di), Roma e...
Category

16th Century Italian Renaissance Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

Arts & Crafts Minton Pottery Kingfisher Tile Designed by Christopher Dresser
Located in Fort Lauderdale, FL
An Arts & Crafts Minton tile in the Kingfisher pattern, designed by Christopher Dresser, ca. 1870. Arts & Crafts designer Christopher Dresser’s works were true to the movement’s c...
Category

Late 19th Century British Arts and Crafts Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Early 20th Century French Hand-Painted Faience Terrine from Rouen
Located in Verviers, BE
The designs on this French faience group is typical of pottery made in Rouen. Early 20th century French hand-painted Faience Terrine from Rouen. Marking on the bottom: "Rouen Fait...
Category

Early 20th Century French Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Faience

Antique French Hand-Painted Majolica Porcelain "Beagles" Wall Pocket, Circa 1890
Located in New Orleans, LA
Antique French hand-painted Majolica porcelain "Beagles" wall pocket, Circa 1890's.
Category

19th Century French Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Majolica

Small Maiolica Flower Pots, Ferretti Manufacture, Lodi, circa 1770-1780
Located in Milano, IT
Two maiolica flower pots Antonio Ferretti Manufacture Lodi, Circa 1770 - 1780 Maiolica polychrome decorated “a piccolo fuoco” (third fire) The...
Category

1770s Italian Rococo Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

Early Wedgwood Neoclassical Creamware Dessert Dishes Made circa 1780
Located in Fort Lauderdale, FL
A set of four early Wedgwood creamware Neoclassical dessert dishes made circa 1780. Sir William Hamilton’s Collection of Etruscan, Greek and Roman an...
Category

Late 18th Century English Neoclassical Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Creamware

Pair of Italian Maiolica Vases, Coiled Snake Handles, Ca. 1880
Located in Banner Elk, NC
Pair of Italian Maiolica Vases, of baluster form, with polychrome Renassance style decptions, on pedestal bases, with large molded and applied snakes forming the handles, the reverse...
Category

Late 19th Century Italian Renaissance Revival Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

Massive Italian Majolica Allegorical Charger by A. Deruta
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
Massive Italian Majolica allegorical charger by A. Deruta Gorgeous continuous Italian Renaissance style decoration Ready to hang.
Category

20th Century Italian Renaissance Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Majolica

English Transferware Large Turkey Platter, Native American by Johnson Brothers
Located in Austin, TX
A large vintage serving platter featuring the Wild Turkey, Native American brown and white transfer-ware pattern by the celebrated English pot...
Category

20th Century English Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware, Pottery

Mado Jolain Signed Ceramic, circa 1950, France
Located in Brussels, BE
Nice Mado Jolain vide-poche ceramic, circa 1950, France. Enameled white earthenware, pale creamy yellow, grey and black decor. Signed underneath. Dimens...
Category

1950s French Mid-Century Modern Vintage Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Ancient Italian Assortment Coffe Pot and Cups, Lodi, Circa 1765-1770
Located in Milano, IT
A coffee pot and two cups with saucers Antonio Ferretti Manufacture Lodi, Circa 1765-1770 Maiolica polychrome decorated “a piccolo fuoco” (third fire). They measure: coffee pot: 9....
Category

1760s Italian Rococo Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

Early 20th Century French Hand-Painted Faience Vasse from Rouen
Located in Verviers, BE
The designs on this French faience group is typical of pottery made in Rouen. Early 20th Century French Hand-Painted Faience Vasse from Rouen Marking on the bottom: " Rouen Fait ...
Category

Early 20th Century French Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Faience

18th Century, Italian Maiolica Flower Pot, Pasquale Rubati, Milan, 1770 circa
Located in Milano, IT
Maiolica flower pot “a mezzaluna” decorated with trompe l’oeil Pasquale Rubati Factory Milan, 1770 circa It measures: 4.7 in (cm 12) X 5 in (...
Category

1770s Italian Rococo Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

1940's Vicke Lindstrand Large Fluted Vase, Earthenware, Upsala Ekeby, Sweden
Located in Brooklyn, NY
An early modernist earthenware vase. Designed by Vicke Lindstrand, for Upsala-Ekeby, Sweden, 1940s. Upsala-Ekeby AB was a porcelain, tile, brick, and glass company founded in 1886...
Category

Mid-20th Century European Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Flowery "George Sand" Set of 4 Pieces
Located in Paris, FR
Very original set of 4 pieces from the "George Sand" set. It's named this way because inspired by the famous set created by the French manufactory Creil & ...
Category

2010s French Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Flowery "George Sand" Breakfast Cups for 2
Located in Paris, FR
Very original set of 2 earthenware breakfast cups in the "George Sand" set. It's named this way because inspired by the famous set created by the French ...
Category

2010s French Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Rare Reticulated Antique Italian Nove Faience Rococo Flower Garland Centerpiece
Located in New York, NY
Large, rare Italian reticulated, hand painted Rococo style floral motif centerpiece by the Nove factory. Designed as an oval reticulated footed basket with masses of hand sculpted fl...
Category

19th Century Italian Rococo Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Faience

Pair of Meiji Period Satsuma Earthenware Vases
Located in Lymington, Hampshire
A pair of Meiji period Satsuma earthenware vases, each with applied elephant-mask handles, painted in overglaze pastel enamels and gilt with a continuous central frieze of sages and ...
Category

1880s Japanese Meiji Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Majolica Plate Centerpiece Hand Painted Wall Dish Bowl Blue Aquamarine Italy
Located in Recanati, IT
Large plate Made and hand painted in Italy according to the original Renaissance painting technique. The plate is decorated in polychrome painted majolica, according to a rich grotes...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Majolica

Flowery Tea Cups for 2 "George Sand"
Located in Paris, FR
Very original set of 2 earthenware teacups in the "George Sand" set. It's named this way because inspired by the famous set created by the French manufacto...
Category

2010s French Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Small Maiolica Plate, Urbino District, 1533-1555
Located in Milano, IT
Maiolica plate (tondino) Urbino district, Casteldurante or Pesaro, 1533-1555 It measures: diam. 7.48 in (19 cm), foot diam. 2.75 in (7 cm), height 1.0...
Category

16th Century Italian Renaissance Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

Art Nouveau Tile Panel Société Céramique Hasselt, Belgium, C1900
By Manufacture de Céramiques Décoratives de Hasselt
Located in Verviers, BE
A set of four beautiful art nouveau wall tiles in a wooden frame. Each individual tile is approximately 8" square and is in very good to excelle...
Category

1890s Belgian Art Nouveau Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Faience

Vintage Italian Hand Painted Faience Soup Dishes
Located in Pasadena, CA
This is superb set of 12 faience "Vietri" Italy Hand Painted Soup plates. The plates were painted and signed by Romolo Apicella. We believe that the plates date to the 1960's, but it...
Category

Mid-20th Century Italian Bohemian Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Faience, Majolica

Italian Maiolica Ancient Sugar Bowl, Lodi, 1770-1780
Located in Milano, IT
Maiolica sugar bowl Antonio Ferretti Manufacture Lodi, Circa 1770-1780 Maiolica polychrome decorated “a piccolo fuoco” (third fire). It measures 3.54 x 4.52 x 3.54 in (9 x 11,5 x 9 cm) Weight: 0.394 lb (0.179 kg) State of conservation: small and slight chips on the edges. The small sugar bowl has a swollen and ribbed body resting on a flat base. The cap-shaped lid follows the rib of the container and is topped with a small knob in the shape of a two-colored fruit. The sugar bowl is painted “a piccolo fuoco” (third fire) with the characteristic floral motif of bunches and isolated semis. An example which closely corresponds to this one is kept at the Civic Museum in Lodi (G. Gregorietti, Maioliche di Lodi, Milano e Pavia, Catalogo della Mostra, Milano, 1964 n. 137). This decorative style represented a strong point of the Lodi factory, which established itself thanks to the vivid nature of the colors made possible by the introduction of a new technique perfected by Paul Hannong in Strasbourg and later introduced by Antonio Ferretti to Italy. The production process, called “piccolo fuoco” (third fire), allowed the use of a greater number of colors than in the past; in particular, the purple of Cassius, a red made from gold chloride, was introduced. Its use allowed for many more tones and shades, from pink to purple. The Ferretti family started their maiolica manufacturing business in Lodi in 1725. The forefather Simpliciano started the business by purchasing an ancient furnace in 1725 and, indeed, we have evidence of the full activity of the furnaces starting from April of the same year (Novasconi-Ferrari-Corvi, 1964, p. 26 n. 4). Simpliciano started a production of excellence also thanks to the ownership of clay quarries in Stradella, not far from Pavia. The production was so successful that in 1726 a decree of the Turin Chamber came to prohibit the importation of foreign ceramics, especially from Lodi, to protect internal production (G. Lise, La ceramica a Lodi, Lodi 1981, p. 59). In its initial stages, the manufacture produced maolicas painted with the “a gran fuoco” (double fire) technique, often in turquoise monochrome, with ornamentation derived from compositional modules in vogue in Rouen in France. This was also thanks to the collaboration of painters like Giorgio Giacinto Rossetti, who placed his name on the best specimens next to the initials of the factory. In 1748 Simpliciano made his will (Gelmini, 1995, p. 30) appointing his son Giuseppe Antonio (known as Antonio) as universal heir. After 1750, when Simpliciano passed away, Antonio was directly involved in the maiolica factory, increasing its fortunes and achieving a reputation on a European level. Particularly important was the aforementioned introduction in 1760 of the innovative “a piccolo fuoco” (third fire) processing, which, expanding the ornamental repertoire with Saxon-inspired floral themes, was able to commercially compete with the German porcelains that had one of its most renowned offerings in the naturalistic Deutsche Blumen. Antonio Ferretti understood and promoted this technique and this decoration, proposing it in a fresher and more corrective version, less linked to botanical tables, both with or without contour lines, as well as in purple or green monochrome. After efforts to introduce more industrial production techniques to the sector succeeded, even the Ferretti manufacture, in the last decade of the eighteenth century, started heading towards decline despite its attempts to adapt production to neoclassical tastes. In 1796 the Napoleonic battle for the conquest of the Lodi bridge over the Adda definitively compromised the furnaces. Production resumed, albeit in a rather stunted manner, until Antonio's death on 29 December 1810. (M. L. Gelmini, pp. 28-30, 38, 43 sgg., 130-136 (for Simpliciano); pp. 31 sgg., 45-47, 142-192 (for Antonio). Bibliography G. Gregorietti, Maioliche di Lodi Milano e Pavia Catalogo della Mostra, Milano, 1964 n. 137; C. Baroni, Storia delle ceramiche nel Lodigiano, in Archivio storico per la città e i comuni del circondario e della diocesi di Lodi, XXXIV (1915), pp. 118, 124, 142; XXXV (1916), pp. 5-8; C. Baroni, La maiolica antica di Lodi, in Archivio storico lombardo, LVIII (1931), pp. 453-455; L. Ciboldi, La maiolica lodigiana, in Archivio storico lodigiano, LXXX (1953), pp. 25 sgg.; S. Levy, Maioliche settecentesche lombarde e venete, Milano 1962, pp. 17 sgg.; A. Novasconi - S. Ferrari - S. Corvi, La ceramica lodigiana, Lodi 1964, ad Indicem; Maioliche di Lodi, Milano e Pavia (catal.), Milano 1964, p. 17; O. Ferrari - G. Scavizzi, Maioliche italiane del Seicento e del Settecento, Milano 1965, pp. 26 sgg.; G. C. Sciolla, Lodi. Museo civico, Bologna 1977, pp. 69-85 passim; G. Lise, La ceramica a Lodi, Lodi 1981; M. Vitali, in Storia dell'arte ceramica...
Category

1770s Italian Rococo Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

English Transferware Large Platter, Harvest Fruit Pattern by Johnson Brothers
Located in Austin, TX
A large vintage serving platter featuring the harvest fruit brown and white transfer-ware pattern by the celebrated English pottery firm, John...
Category

20th Century English Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware, Pottery

Large French Provincial Faience Hand Painted Flower, Butterfly, Dragonfly Box
Located in New York, NY
Beautiful, large French Provincial style faience covered box profusely decorated with vibrant bouquets of flowers against a marvelous craquelure background. The cover topped with fiv...
Category

20th Century French French Provincial Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Faience

Italian Maiolica Cup Ferretti Lodi, circa 1770 - 1780
Located in Milano, IT
Maiolica puerperal cup Antonio Ferretti Manufacture Lodi, Circa 1770 - 1780 Maiolica polychrome decorated “a piccolo fuoco” (third fire). It measures: 4.3 x 6.8 x 5.3 in (11 x 17,5 x 13,5 cm) Weight: 0.78 lb (358 g) State of conservation: some closed pass-through fêlures on the cup, barely visible on the outside. Some use chips on the edge of the lid, two of which are more marked. From about the mid-sixteenth century, the puerperal soup tureen or puerperal cup became one of the most popular wedding gifts in central Italy. As an auspicious symbol, it replaced the birth table (“desco da parto”) which, on the occasion of high-ranking marriages, from the thirteenth century, had been painted by famous artists, especially in Tuscany. In France this same tureen is called "écuelle de mariée", as it is given to spouses as a sign of fertility. During the eighteenth century this custom spread even outside Italy to all social levels. Depending on availability and rank, it was made of different materials: precious metals, maiolica, porcelain, glass, pewter, etc. Beginning in the mid-twentieth century, the custom of this symbolic homage gradually disappeared, although famous designers such as Gio Ponti and Giuseppe Gariboldi, even as recently as the 1940s, revisited a model of a small puerperal soup bowl for the Ginori and, also in Italy in 1940, in a national competition for young potters, one of the themes of the test was indeed a modern model of a puerperal cup as an auspicious gift. This particular cup was also called a "service cup" or "puerperal vase" or "stuffed cup" - the windows were sealed with straw to prevent drafts of air for women in labor. In the eighteenth century the line of the puerpera cup was simplified, so much so that it took the form of a small tureen with two handles - the typical broth cup...
Category

1770s Italian Rococo Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

1870s Antique French Faience Pottery White Pink Gold Flower Holder Wall Pocket
Located in New York, NY
A delightful cornucopia-shaped Faience wall decoration signed Angoulême, a flower holder wall pocket in ivory white tin-glazed earthenware, hand-painted with delicate flowers and gold accents, with the typical 19th-century romanticism of the time and the growing interest and fascination with the natural landscape. The scrolled borders are highlighted in gold and decorated with rococo scrolls...
Category

Late 19th Century French Rococo Revival Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Faience

Dutch ceramic Purple and White Plaque with Figures in a Landscape, Utrecht 1760
Located in Verviers, BE
Purple and white plaque with figures in a landscape. Utrecht, circa 1760. Mark: Le J Lozenge-shaped purple and white plaque with a conversing couple in a landscape. In the foreground a man and a women with a bare bosom sit on a river bank, behind them stands a tree leaning to the left. A church tower and some houses are depicted on the other bank and a boat sails on the water. The molded and raised rim is painted with a continuous branch of leaves, the back is glazed white. The woman with bare bosom shows that a pastoral scene is depicted. The man and woman are possibly shepherds, although their characteristic staff and sheep are lacking. Pastoral literature enjoyed considerable popularity in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and themes from it were frequently used for paintings, drawings and prints. The painter must have taken such a print as a model. The Le J signature is probably of the tile painter and has not yet been identified. Besides the mass production of tiles, the tile factories in Utrecht in the eighteenth and the first half of the nineteenth centuries also manufactured other items on a small scale such as plaques, tobacco boxes, tea-stoves and shoes. Plaques form the largest part of this incidental production, and can clearly be distinguished stylistically and technically from Delft examples. Stylistically they are related more to tiles from Utrecht. The layered structure of the foreground with rocks and low shrubbery is derived from tiles with landscape, shepherd and biblical decors. The same also applies to the (leaning) tree, a typical Utrecht feature. The spiral cloud motifs are painted on Utrecht tiles as well. There are also important differences in production techniques. Delft plaques...
Category

Mid-18th Century Dutch Baroque Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Faience

Assembled Pair of Wedgwood Cress or Strawberry Dishes, Late 18th C
Located in valatie, NY
An assembled pair of Wedgwood cress or strawberry dishes, Two Piece; Footed Pierced Dish with Stand. Late 18th c. This would have been used to serve watercress or strawberries after ...
Category

1780s English Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Creamware

Set of 4 French Strasbourg Faience Chargers with Flower Decor
Located in Haddonfield, NJ
Two large French Faience dishes and two smaller from the city of Strasbourg in hand painted floral decoration. They are approximately from around...
Category

Late 18th Century French Louis XVI Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Faience

Art Nouveau Majolica Oval Asparagus Dish Manufactured by Orchies France
Located in Paris, FR
This 19th century Majolica asparagus hand-painted plate was made in France. Decorated in the middle with asparagus in barbotine - slip with yellow shell pattern on the lip and art no...
Category

19th Century French Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Majolica

Ancient Maiolica Dishes with flowers, Lombard Manufacture, 1770-1780 Circa
Located in Milano, IT
Assortment of dishes Lombard manufacture 1770 – 1780 Circa Maiolica polychrome decorated “a piccolo fuoco” (third fire). Two large dishes: diameter 14.76 in (37.5 cm); weight 4.5...
Category

1770s Italian Rococo Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Maiolica

Plate Centerpiece, Tray Decorated Bowl, Wall Dish Majolica Aquamarine, In Stock
Located in Recanati, IT
This exclusive ceramic plate is handmade and hand-painted in Italy following the original Renaissance painting technique, unchanged over time, which we observe to the letter: it is d...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Majolica

Old Hall Drabware Ceramic Jug with Female Cardinal Virtues Figures
Located in Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire
Very unusual and rare English earthenware drabware jug finely molded in relief with female figures portraying six of the Cardinal virtues made by Old Hall Earthenware Co...
Category

19th Century English Victorian Antique Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Earthenware Model of a Duiker by John Skeaping for Wedgwood, circa 1960
Located in Forest Row, East Sussex
An earthenware model of a Duiker by John Skeaping for Wedgwood. Cream glazed with printed Wedgwood marks to underneath. Dimensions: H 12cm, W 18cm, D 10cm Origin: English ...
Category

20th Century English Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Earthenware

Plate Centerpiece Tray Bowl Decorated Ornament, Wall Dish Majolica Red, In Stock
Located in Recanati, IT
This exclusive ceramic plate is handmade and hand-painted in Italy following the original Renaissance painting technique, unchanged over time, which we observe to the letter: it is d...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Majolica

Plate Centerpiece Bowl Tray Decorated Ornament Majolica Blue White Deruta Italy
Located in Recanati, IT
This splendid ceramic plate is handmade and hand-painted in Italy following the original Renaissance painting technique, unchanged over time, which we observe to the letter: it is de...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Majolica

Plate Centerpiece Tray Ornament Bowl Wall Dish Majolica White Decorated In Stock
Located in Recanati, IT
This exclusive ceramic plate is handmade and hand-painted in Italy following the original Renaissance painting technique, unchanged over time, which we observe to the letter: it is d...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Earthenware Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Majolica

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