- Josiah Wedgwood
- Card Motto: We Lessen Our Wants by Lessening Our Desires, 1877
- Earthenware
- 9.5 x 9.5 in (24.13 x 24.13 cm)
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Not For Sale
Plate, 9.5 inches diameter. Black transfer with polychrome clobbering. Printed and impressed maker's marks for Josiah Wedgwood. The “Card Motto” series is part of the Butterfly Tremblay Dessert Service. The "Card Motto" series depicts Pierrots inhabiting a tabletop world to illustrate quotations. A variety of border treatments was employed with the framed illustrations. This version features the 'Formosa' border. The quotation or proverb on this specific pattern is: "We lessen our wants by lessening our desires."
Josiah Wedgwood was born in Burslem, Staffordshire, on July 12, 1730, into a family with a long tradition as potters. At the age of nine, after the death of his father, he worked in his family's pottery. In 1759 he set up his own pottery works in Burslem. There he produced a highly durable cream-colored earthenware that so pleased Queen Charlotte that in 1762 she appointed him royal supplier of dinnerware. From the public sale of Queen's Ware, as it came to be known, Wedgwood was able, in 1768, to build near Stoke-on-Trent a village, which he named Etruria, and a second factory equipped with tools and ovens of his own design. At first only ornamental pottery was made in Etruria, but by 1773 Wedgwood had concentrated all his production facilities there. During his long career Wedgwood developed revolutionary ceramic materials, notably basalt and jasperware. After Wedgwood's death in Etruria on January 3, 1795, his descendants carried on the business, which still produces many of his designs.
- Subject Matter: Miscellaneous
- Collections: British Transferware (1800-1930), Josiah Wedgwood