Jug (Pitcher)

CultureEnglish
Titles
  • Jug (Pitcher)
Datec. 1810–1820
Made inEngland
MediumLead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
Dimensions5 7/8 × 7 1/2 in. (14.9 × 19.1 cm)
Credit LineThe Bayou Bend Collection, gift of Miss Ima Hogg
Object numberB.70.32
Not on view

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Department
Bayou Bend
Object Type
DescriptionThough the technique was centuries old, production of shiny, metallic lusterware began in Staffordshire near the end of the 1700s. Potters applied metallic oxides to the glazed and fired wares, and then fixed the metallic layer with another firing at a lower temperature. Platinum oxide produced silver luster; gold oxide produced gold, bronze, or copper luster effects. Pink luster relied on gold and tin oxides. The luster could be applied freehand, with the use of stencils and resist patterns, and with mottled or blotchy effects.
Provenance[Ginsburg & Levy, New York]; purchased by Miss Ima Hogg; given to MFAH, 1970.
Exhibition History

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

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Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1820–1830
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.62.3
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1825–1835
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.72.124
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1830–1840
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware) with transfer print
B.70.71
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1825–1835
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.70.70
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1810–1820
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware) with transfer print
B.70.68
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1805–1815
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.70.67
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1820–1830
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.60.1
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1805–1815
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.70.64
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1820–1830
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.70.63
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1800–1815
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.62.6
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1810–1815
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.62.7
Jug (Pitcher)
c. 1810–1820
Lead-glazed earthenware (lusterware)
B.70.86