Antique
Continental Pottery 2
Dutch tin-glazed pottery, known by the name of the
town of Delft where it became established eventually,
was made in great quantities and much was sent to
England. Not only was there a big trade in dishes
and other domestic wares, but Dutch tiles were sent
also. These were of sufficient importance to become
a separate branch of pottery-making; some men made
them to the exclusion of all else, and sets of tiles
were painted to be placed together and form pictures.
Germany, also, had numerous potteries making tin-glazed
wares, and those of Hamburg, Frankfurt, Hanau and
Bayreuth were outstanding centres; the first-named,
together with Nurem-burg, being noted for making
the great glazed and decorated pottery stoves used
for heating rooms in many Continental countries.
Much of the output resembled the earthenware being
made elsewhere at the time, and much remains confused
with contemporary English and Dutch work. Many
German and Swiss potters made lead-glazed wares with
slip and sgraffito decoration; much of it inscribed
and dated. There were big centres for the making
of stoneware at Cologne and Siegburg, the latter
near Bonn. Much of the output was decorated elaborately
with impressed patterns, and a large quantity of
be liar mines was made; these are jugs with fat bodies
and short thin necks, the head of a bearded man impressed
on the front.
Bernard Palissy, whose life-span embraced almost
the whole of the sixteenth century, made dishes and
other pieces modelled with lizards, shells, leaves
and fishes. The clay of which these are made is whitish,
and Palissy and his followers covered it effectively
with coloured transparent glazes. It is said that
'no class of pottery has been so widely copied for
fraud'.
The white lead-glazed earthenware of St Porchaire
was decorated in an unusual manner by impressing
it in patterns with small metal stamps and filling
the marks with coloured clays. This small sixteenth-century
pottery has had a chequered literary history, and
a century ago was the subject of speculation and
bitter argument among experts; first stated to have
been at Lyons, then at Beauvais, and again Oiron,
it has been decided that it was actually located
at St Porchaire, north of Bordeaux. Only just over
sixty pieces of the ware survive, and most of them
are in museums. It has been faked, and the English
Minton factory made exact copies of known examples.
Other French potters were affected closely by Italian
work, but by the seventeenth century the factory
at Rouen was making a tin-glazed majolica of character
with decoration in red and blue. Potteries at Marseilles,
Moustiers, Strasbourg, and elsewhere shortly
became prominent, and today French faience is recognized
as having a distinction of its own that rivals porcelain.
It was well made and well painted, the shapes were
interesting and often strikingly unusual.
The Swedish potteries at Marieberg and Rorstrand
made excellent wares in original shapes with fine
decoration towards the end of the eighteenth century.
At about the same date a Norwegian factory at Herreboe
made some equally interesting pieces. Productions
from these factories are rare outside Scandinavia.
All types of wares were made in Portugal, but most
are indistinguishable from those of Spain, Italy
and Holland. A century ago, a pottery was founded
at Caldas da Rainha by Manuel Mafra, and has made
imitations of Palissy-ware and other colour-glazed
pieces ever since. Some bear the maker's mark, others
do not.
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St
Porchaire
he white lead-glazed earthenware of St Porchaire
was decorated in an unusual manner by impressing
it in patterns with small metal stamps and filling
the marks with coloured clays.
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