LaurieAnnie's photos with the keyword: Wedgwood
Wedgwood Copy of the Portland Vase in the Metropol…
01 Nov 2014 |
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Portland vase
Factory: Josiah Wedgwood and Sons (1759–present)
Date: ca. 1840–60
Culture: British, Staffordshire
Medium: Black basalt ware with white relief decoration
Dimensions: H. 10 3/8 in. (26.4 cm)
Classification: Ceramics-Pottery
Credit Line: Gift of Henry G. Marquand, 1894
Accession Number: 94.4.172
Description:
Josiah Wedgwood, whose ceramic creations evoked the styles and themes of antiquity so popular in the late eighteenth century, produced a copy of the celebrated Portland Vase in black-and-white jasper-ware. The original, attributed to the Roman gem-cutter Dioskourides, is in the style of works made between 30 and 20 B.C. After its discovery in the late sixteenth century in the tomb of the Emperor Septimius Severus, it became one of the most admired works of antiquity and passed through an illustrious series of collections, among them those of Cardinal Barberini, Sir William Hamilton, and finally, the duchess of Portland, who donated it to the British Museum.
The iconography of the original black-and-white cameo-cut glass vessel remains a mystery, though many interpretations have been offered. A recent theory is that the frieze depicts (as the vessel is turned) Peleus entering to meet Thetis in the presence of her parents and Aphrodite and that the vase was made as a wedding present for the Emperor Augustus's daugher Julia on her marriage to Marcus Claudius Marcellus, her cousin, in 25 B.C.
Wedgwood continued to issue editions of the vase throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/187784
Detail of a Wedgwood Copy of the Portland Vase in…
01 Nov 2014 |
|
Portland vase
Factory: Josiah Wedgwood and Sons (1759–present)
Date: ca. 1840–60
Culture: British, Staffordshire
Medium: Black basalt ware with white relief decoration
Dimensions: H. 10 3/8 in. (26.4 cm)
Classification: Ceramics-Pottery
Credit Line: Gift of Henry G. Marquand, 1894
Accession Number: 94.4.172
Description:
Josiah Wedgwood, whose ceramic creations evoked the styles and themes of antiquity so popular in the late eighteenth century, produced a copy of the celebrated Portland Vase in black-and-white jasper-ware. The original, attributed to the Roman gem-cutter Dioskourides, is in the style of works made between 30 and 20 B.C. After its discovery in the late sixteenth century in the tomb of the Emperor Septimius Severus, it became one of the most admired works of antiquity and passed through an illustrious series of collections, among them those of Cardinal Barberini, Sir William Hamilton, and finally, the duchess of Portland, who donated it to the British Museum.
The iconography of the original black-and-white cameo-cut glass vessel remains a mystery, though many interpretations have been offered. A recent theory is that the frieze depicts (as the vessel is turned) Peleus entering to meet Thetis in the presence of her parents and Aphrodite and that the vase was made as a wedding present for the Emperor Augustus's daugher Julia on her marriage to Marcus Claudius Marcellus, her cousin, in 25 B.C.
Wedgwood continued to issue editions of the vase throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/187784
The Marriage of Cupid and Psyche in the Brooklyn M…
28 May 2010 |
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Plaque
Maker: Wedgwood & Bentley, 1768-1780
Modelled By: William Hackwood, died 1836
Medium: Jasper ware
Dates: ca. 1776 - 1780
Dimensions: 9 7/8 x 14 in. (25.1 x 35.6 cm)
Markings: "WEDGWOOD / & BENTLEY" impressed on back.
Signature: no signature
Inscriptions: no inscriptions
Collections: Decorative Arts
Museum Location: This item is on view in Wedgewood, 4th Floor
Accession Number: 64.82.66
Credit Line: Gift of the estate of Emily Winthrop Miles
Text from: www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/objects/83527/Plaqu...
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