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Early Figures
I have always appreciated English pottery figures made between 1780 and 1840. They are wonderfully decorative and a prism for peering into the past through the eyes of those who lived then. Fashioned in an era before photography, they afford intriguing three-dimensional glimpses of the people and happenings of those bygone times. Although intrinsically delicate, they exude naive robustness and a colorful cheerfulness that charms. These figures are not just pretty and decorative objects, and they are also important historical artifacts documenting aspects of life otherwise passed and unrecorded.
Early English pottery figures are especially engaging because they reveal the full spectrum of everyday life in the 18th and early 19th century and often depict ordinary people engaging in everyday activitiesāstreet vendors, children at play, musicians, and gardeners are all captured in clay. Others portray meaningful life-cycle events, including courtships, weddings, and christenings.
Influential people are also fashioned in figural formāradical activists, religious leaders, politicians, military heroes, royalty, and actors and actresses, to name a few. The figures record events that influenced the course of western civilization, including the Agricultural Revolution, the French Revolution, the early temperance movement, and the drive to spread literacy. They allow us to understand what mattered to peopleāthe emphasis on classical figures that dictated the dĆ©cor of the day, and the host of biblical figures that reflect the centrality of faith. They invite us to ponder how far we had come from that not-so-distant time when barbaric animal sports were central to popular culture, and young waifs were forced to clean chimneys. Collectively, the figures document the people and events that shaped their era, and ultimately, the world we live in today.
Reference Books
- Myrna Schkolneās four-volume work Staffordshire Figures 1780-1840, published by Schiffer Publishing, is an ambitious effort to catalog and attribute the enormous body of early enamel-painted pottery figures made in the Staffordshire Potteries during the Industrial Revolution. Within their color-packed pages, over 4,000 images afford engaging glimpses of a vanished world. These volumes pay tribute to the pottersā work and importantly, Myrnaās ground-breaking work on attributions will provide an enduring foundation of knowledge for museums and collectors.
Showing 33–48 of 113 results
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Staffordshire pottery black and yellow coloured figure of a seated cat mid 19th century
£785$1059
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Yorkshire Prattware Mexborough Pottery Clock Money Box circa 1810
£2200$2970
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Antique English pottery documentary money box- bank in the form of a Wesleyan Chapel dated 1873
£1350$1822
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Staffordshire pottery figure of a lion with the face of William Pitt circa 1795
£750$1012
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Large scale Prattware figure of a lion foot resting on a sphere England circa 1800
£2750$3712
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18th century Staffordshire creamware pottery male figure with colored glazes circa 1770
£2850$3847
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The Seasons pottery set in Prattware from the Dixon-Austin Pottery Sunderland in circa 1820
£3750$5062
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A rare and good Thin Boy Prattware pottery Toby Jug English circa 1800
£6750$9112
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Staffordshire pottery pearlware money box formed as a castle gate house circa 1820
£475$641
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English pottery pearlware figure of a horse standing on a green-turquoise base St Anthony’s Pottery circa 1815
£2850$3847
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Miniature Staffordshire pottery pearlware Toby Jug circa 1820
£375$506
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Staffordshire pottery figure group The Raising of Lazarus circa 1820
£2450$3307
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English pottery figure of a horse St Anthony’s Pottery Newcastle upon Tyne circa 1810
£2950$3982
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Staffordshire pottery pearlware bust of Horatio Nelson with enamel decoration circa 1815
£1100$1485
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Antique Staffordshire bocage pearlware figure of a ram marked SALT.
£325$438
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Pair of English saltglaze spaniels on oval bases. Briddon Pottery Derbyshire circa 1830
£4850$6547