- Pair of Wall Pockets
- Pair of Wall Vases
.2: 8 1/4 × 5 3/4 × 3 in. (21 × 14.6 × 7.6 cm)
Explore Further
Since early times, vase forms were made to display fresh, dried, or artificial flowers. Wall pockets, or wall-mounted flower containers, first were made from porcelain in China in the 1600s. In the 1700s and 1800s in England, wall pockets, like the ones offered here, were sometimes known as “cornucopias” or “flower horns.” Reaching the height of their popularity in the mid-1700s during the rococo period, these ornamental objects probably hung in dining rooms and parlors. Sold in pairs, wall pockets often were asymmetrical shapes with right- and left-handed examples. They were usually constructed of press-molded fronts or slip-cast fronts and then half joined to flat, slab backs, which were pierced twice to allow for a wire for hanging. England produced a wider arrange of wall pockets than any other country. They were manufactured in delftware, creamware, pearlware, green-glazed earthenware, soft-paste porcelain, and white salt-glazed stoneware. With the rise of neoclassicism in the 1770s, the popularity of the form began to fade.
Plate 18 of Robert Sayer’s The Ladies Amusement: Or, Whole Art of Japanning Made Easy (London, 1762) illustrates a twisted, flower-filled, cornucopia-shaped pocket. Some wall pockets found their way to the North American market. The same year of Sayer’s publication, the firm of Keeling and Morris announced in the sale of “A complete Assortment of the most fashionable kinds of Glass and Stone Ware,” including “Venis Flower Faces both green and white.” When Richard Olney of Providence, Rhode Island, died in 1795, he had many possessions, including one “stone hanging flower pot.”
Related example: A pair of wall pockets with the same molded pattern are in the Colonial Williamsburg collection in Williamsburg, Virginia.
Provenance[Garry Atkins, London]; purchased by Patti Mullendore, Houston; given to MFAH, 2019.
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