N° d'objet
60/742/1-15
Créateur
Description
This stoneware coffee set, for serving and drinking coffee, was made circa 1945–60 by Harry and May Davis at the Crowan Pottery in Praze-an-Beeble, Cornwall. It is part of a large collection of traditional craft products acquired from the British Council in 1960. The set comprises a coffee pot with lid, a cream jug, a sugar bowl, and six cups and saucers. Each piece has a brown tenmoku glaze – a dark glaze with a surface which resembles oil-spotting – and, with the exception of the saucers, each piece is fluted, with the concave portions shaded dark green.
Description physique
1 coffee set: stoneware; good condition
Historique d'archive
MERL miscellaneous note, B. L. 22 March 1961 – ‘The British Council collection. // This collection of material which is covered by the accession numbers 60/430 to 60/791 contains examples of craft products made in the British Isles. The major part of the collection was prepared immediately after the Second World War for a travelling exhibition which was sent to Australia and New Zealand. // The collection was purchased for a nominal sum by the Museum in two portions, the one in the summer of 1960 and the other in February 1961. // For further details see the individual catalogue cards and the catalogue prepared for the temporary exhibition of the collection.’, MERL 'Catalogue index' card – ‘A coffee set made of stoneware with “Tenmoku glaze.” The set comprises a coffee pot with lid, a cream jug, a sugar basin and six cups and saucers. // 1) The pot is 6 inches tall. // 2) The cream jug is 2 3/4 inches tall. // 3) Sugar basin: diameter at mouth is 3 1/8 inches. // 4) The cups are 2 /34 inches in diameter at the mouth. // 5) The saucers are 4 1/2 inches in diameter. // Each piece (with the exception of the saucers) is fluted and the concave portion and upper band are shaded dark green. The background is brown. // From: The Crowan Pottery, (Harry and May Davis), Praze, Nr. Cambourne, Cornwall.’, MERL ‘Country Craftsmanship’ Exhibition Catalogue, 2 May–31 October 1961, ‘Introductory Note’ by Andrew Jewell – ‘The objects shown in this Exhibition of Country Craftsmanship were originally purchased by the British Council in 1946. They were selected for exhibition in Australia and New Zealand as samples of traditional handcrafts which were then being practised in the British countryside. The Museum of English Rural Life was fortunate to acquire this valuable collection from the Council and to have the opportunity of displaying such a wide variety of skills. // Almost all the crafts shown are still to be found in this country although, in the intervening fifteen years, many of the small firms and individual craftsmen whose products are represented in the Exhibition, have given up working. The number who now remain to carry on these particular traditional crafts continues to decline with the growth of mechanization, the obsolescence of their products and the difficult of finding apprentices to follow them. // All the objects on display have one characteristic in common – they were made to be used. Any aesthetic qualities which the craftsman achieved grew without self-consciousness. Over long years of apprenticeship the craftsman developed an intimate knowledge of the raw material at his disposal and its peculiarities. He acquired by inheritance the methods of his craft which may have had a continuous tradition over centuries of time. And he was quite familiar with the way in which his product was to be used. // We can derive pleasure simply by looking at the shapes and decorations. Both, however, are inseparable from function and environment, and the objects can only be most fully appreciated by an understanding of the purpose for which each was intended. // This, then, is an exhibition of everyday things, made by men and women who might not think of themselves as artists, but whose work, nevertheless, has enriched the daily life of those who live with their products.’, MERL ‘Country Craftsmanship’ Exhibition Catalogue, 2 May–31 October 1961, p.7 – 'Pottery // Slipware has been the traditional domestic pottery of Great Britain from very early times. It takes its name from the use of slip (semi liquid clay and water) which is used, generally as decoration, on a body of a contrasting colour.’, MERL ‘Country Craftsmanship’ Exhibition Catalogue, 2 May–31 October 1961, p.10 – 'Coffee Set. Stoneware with tenmoku glaze. // (Harry & May Davis, Crowan Pottery, Praze, Cornwall.)', British Council Ref. No. Not known.
Lieu de création
Praze-an-Beeble, Praze-an-Beeble
Date
1945 - 1960
Nom d'objet
Matériel
Technique
Document électronique
- L:\MERL\Objects\JISC 2012\60 series negatives\60_3665.tif - High resolution image