Skip to main content

English Porcelain

Collection Info
English Porcelain

Despite early experiments with the production of porcelain, the earliest commercially successful production of porcelain in England did not occur until 1745, when the Chelsea manufactory was established in London. By the 1750s a number of porcelain manufacturers were operating in London, the Midlands, East Anglia and the West of England. All English porcelain manufacturers were run as commercial businesses by entrepreneurs without direct royal or noble patronage.

Early English porcelain was “soft-paste”, low-fired and made without kaolin. During the second half of the eighteenth century, manufacturers tried different formulas to prevent their porcelain from slumping during firing or from cracking when filled with boiling liquids – an essential requirement given the British love of tea. Bodies could include “frit”, a glassy compound made of a variety of different materials that were ground and added to clay; soapstone, which prevented cracking; and bone ash, which added strength. Eventually, kaolin was discovered in England and some hard-paste porcelain was produced.

The Gardiner Museum’s assemblage of English porcelain includes gifts made by many significant Canadian collectors including George and Helen Gardiner, Vernon W. Armstrong, Norman B. and Cicely B. Bell, Barry and Marjorie Pepper, Roger Wilson, the Radlett Collection, and others. It is the most comprehensive public collection in the country.

Read MoreRead Less
Sort:
Filters
14 results
Plate
Artist / Maker: Chelsea Porcelain Manufactory
c.1758
Object number: G12.1.5
Basket
Artist / Maker: Worcester Porcelain Manufactory
c.1768-1773
Object number: G23.8.70
Bowl
Artist / Maker: James Giles
c.1768; decorated in London, c.1768-1770
Object number: G23.8.74
Cup and Saucer
Artist / Maker: James Giles
c.1765-1772
Object number: G23.8.98a-b
Cup and Saucer
Artist / Maker: James Giles
c.1768-1770
Object number: G23.8.99a-b
Cup and saucer
Artist / Maker: James Giles
c.1770-1774
Object number: G23.8.101a-b
Plate with “Lady Mary Wortley Montagu” Pattern
Artist / Maker: James Giles
c.1768-1770; decorated in London, c.1768-1770
Object number: G23.8.110
Plate from the Hope Edwards Service
Artist / Maker: Worcester Porcelain Manufactory
c.1768-1770; decorated in London, c.1768-1770
Object number: G23.8.111
Plate
Artist / Maker: Worcester Porcelain Manufactory
c.1768-1770; decorated in London, c.1768-1770
Object number: G23.8.112
Plate
Artist / Maker: Worcester Porcelain Manufactory
c.1767-1770
Object number: G23.8.116
Pair of plates
Artist / Maker: James Giles
c.1768-1770
Object number: G23.8.117.1-2
Tureen and stand
Artist / Maker: Worcester Porcelain Manufactory
c.1770
Object number: G23.8.180a-c
Tureen and stand
Artist / Maker: James Giles
c.1770
Object number: G23.8.181a-c
Bowl
Artist / Maker: James Giles
c.1768-1770; decorated in London, c.1768-1770
Object number: G23.8.191