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Adrienne T. Boggs

Albuquerque, NM

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Huntingdon by William Brownfield & Son(s)
Huntingdon by William Brownfield & Son(s)
Huntingdon by William Brownfield & Son(s)
Huntingdon by William Brownfield & Son(s)
Huntingdon by William Brownfield & Son(s)
  • William Brownfield & Son(s)
  • Huntingdon, Rd. 10 June 1875
  • Earthenware
  • 11 x 8.75 in (27.94 x 22.23 cm)
  • Not For Sale
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Platter, 11 x 8.75 inches. Black transfer with celadon glaze. Printed and impressed maker's marks for William Brownfield & Son. The registry diamond indicates a pattern registration date of 10 June 1875. The impressed 11/82 suggests a production date of November 1882. This pattern features a pheasant on the ground next to a rock, surrounded by ferns and foliage. To the left is a stream bordered on the left by cattails. The pheasant is looking towards two snipes flying above.

The Brownfields were potters in Cobridge, North Staffordshire from about 1837 to the 1890s. William Brownfield began as a junior partner in the firm of Robinson, Wood & Brownfield, at a pottery formerly owned by Ralph & James Clews. Eventually William Brownfield appears to be the sole owner, the first reference appearing in White’s 1851 directory where we find under china and earthenware manufacturers, Brownfield Wm. Cobridge. The factory produced a range of earthenware, stone china and added stoneware and parian to their productions. In the International Exhibition of 1862 they were awarded a medal for “printed earthenware” but no details are given of the patterns. Entries at other International exhibitions followed. In 1871 William Etches Brownfield entered the business and it became William Brownfield & Son. William Sr. died in 1873 and William Jr. continued and his brother Edward Arthur Brownfield joined the firm. They continued to make a wide range of ceramics with occasional tour de force pieces for national and international exhibition, becoming one of the top ten Staffordshire factories. The company’s last swansong was an unusual venture fostered by Arthur Edward Brownfield, who in 1892 who created a Potter’s Guild based on John Ruskin’s principles. But this “cooperative” was unfortunately destined to failure and the company was wound up in 1900.

  • Subject Matter: Aesthetic (Animals)
  • Collections: Aesthetic Transferware, William Brownfield & Son(s)

Other Work From Adrienne T. Boggs

Indian by Dunn, Bennett & Co.
Honfleur by Powell, Bishop & Stonier
Hong Kong by Powell, Bishop & Stonier
Ideal by W. H. Grindley & Co.
Huntley by Brownhills Pottery Co.
Hizen by Brownhills Pottery Co.
Hizen by Bates, Gildea & Walker
Hazel by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Hazel by Dunn, Bennett & Co.
Hazel by Dunn, Bennett & Co.
See all artwork from Adrienne T. Boggs
 

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