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English Delftware

Collection Info
Photographer: Toni Hafkenscheid

Tin-glazed earthenware was introduced to England in the late sixteenth century by Flemish potters who settled in the region of Norfolk to escape religious persecution. Potteries specializing in tin-glazed earthenware (known as delftware) however flourished in the London area from about 1610. They served a wide segment of seventeenth-century society, with the highest demand coming from the gentry, rich tradesmen and members of flourishing guilds. Increased market demand stimulated the emergence of potteries in Brislington near Bristol, and throughout the British Isles.

The collection illustrates a broad range of functional and decorative objects, embellished with popular heraldic and royal motifs, and showing the new fashion for chinoiseries and the impact of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain.

Until England started producing porcelain domestically from 1745 onwards, delftware potteries supplied better-quality ceramic tableware to a middle-class clientele who could not afford Chinese porcelain, nor the continental imports from France and Germany. The production of delftware started to decline in the 1770s when creamware, a new and technically superior earthenware body was introduced to the market.

The Gardiner Museum’s collection of English delftware was largely donated by George and Helen Gardiner and was expanded with a significant gift from Joan Clark from the collection of Thomas Henry Clark.

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Charger with portrait of Charles II
c.1685
Object number: G83.1.412
Charger with William III and Mary II
c.1690-1700
Object number: G83.1.418
Charger with the Duke of Marlborough
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.421
Charger with Adam and Eve
c.1690
Object number: G83.1.424
Charger with flowers in a vase
c.1660-1680
Object number: G83.1.428
Charger with equestrian figure
c.1700
Object number: G83.1.435
Posset pot with chinoiseries
1687
Object number: G83.1.444
Dish with reticulated border
1674
Object number: G83.1.463
Plate with chinoiserie design
1690
Object number: G83.1.467
Washbowl with chinoiserie design
c.1695-1710
Object number: G83.1.475
Plate with a woman smoking a pipe
1700
Object number: G83.1.476
Wash basin with bird design
c.1700-1720
Object number: G83.1.481
Plate with Order of the Garter and 'IHS'
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.483
Plate with woman supporting a bucket
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.484
Plate with lion
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.485
Plate with bird
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.486
Plate with a swan
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.487
Scroll saltcellar with chinoiserie design
c.1690-1700
Object number: G83.1.532
Two-handled garden urn with chinoiserie design
c.1690-1700
Object number: G83.1.534
Jar painted in the Dutch-style
c.1700-1710
Object number: G83.1.540
Punch bowl painted in the Dutch-style
1714
Object number: G83.1.541
Plate with stylized leaf design
c.1720-1730
Object number: G99.9.16
Plate with stylized foliate design
c.1730-1740
Object number: G99.9.17