• Portfolio
  • Collections
  • Artists
  • Log In
Artwork Archive Logo
  • Discovery

Adrienne T. Boggs

Albuquerque, NM

Message
  • Portfolio
  • Collections
  • Artists
Trellis by Baker & Co.
Trellis by Baker & Co.
Trellis by Baker & Co.
  • Baker & Co.
  • Trellis, c. 1869-1890
  • Earthenware
  • 9.3 x 9.3 in (23.62 x 23.62 cm)
  • Not For Sale
  • Share
  • Facebook logo facebook Share this blog post via Facebook
  • Twitter logo twitter Share this blog post via Twitter
  • LinkedIn logo linkedin Share blog post via LinkedIn
  • Email logo email Share this blog post via email
Prev
Next

Plate, 9.3 x 9.3 inches. Green transfer. Printed maker's mark for Baker & Co. This pattern features the eponymous trellis, interwoven with leaf clusters of two varieties, and tiny flowers. The border features a less geometrical trellis with the same leaves and flowers.

Baker & Co. had a history dating back to 1790. By the end of the century Ralph Bourne and William Baker were working together as 'Bourne & Baker.' By the late 1820s, Ralph Bourne and William Baker, in partnership with John Bourne, had acquired additional works. In 1833, with the deaths of John Bourne and William Baker, the partnership was dissolved, and then for a short time the business was carried on by Ralph Bourne, William Baker the younger, and John Baker. By 1839 William Baker was running the business alone. The business was subsequently carried on as William Baker and Company, makers of printed, sponged, and pearl-white granite ware for export. In the 1851 census William Baker also described himself as "Joint Coal Proprietor" because the partnership rented 18 acres of land on the south side of Fenton House which belonged to Lane End Chapel. Here they opened a colliery called Glebe Colliery which supplied coal to the factory and to other pottery manufacturers in the area. Next to the colliery they opened a brick-works served by an adjacent clay pit. The potworks flourished under William Baker’s management and by the middle of the 19th century, with almost 500 employees, was the biggest firm in Fenton. The firm changed its name from William Baker & Co. (1839-1868) to Baker & Co. in 1869 and was dissolved on 4 October 1893. Baker & Co. consisted of the three partners Joseph Gimson, William Edward Challinor, and Thomas Jones. The company was incorporated as Baker & Co. Ltd. in 1893. The company was incorporated as Baker & Co. Ltd. in 1893.

  • Subject Matter: Aesthetic (Floral & Botanical)
  • Collections: Aesthetic Transferware, Baker & Co.

Other Work From Adrienne T. Boggs

The Tempest, Act I, Scene II by Mintons China Works
Tropics by Willets Manufacturing Company
Trentham by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Trentham by Edge, Malkin & Co.
Tonquin by Edge, Malkin & Co.
Tonquin by Edge, Malkin & Co.
Tokar by Old Hall Earthenware Co. Ltd.
Thorn by William Alsager Adderley & Co.
The World (St. Peter’s Rome/Arc du Carousel Paris) by Wallis Gimson & Co.
The World (Lieutenant Governor’s Residence, Toronto/The Customhouse, Boston) by Wallis Gimson & Co.
See all artwork from Adrienne T. Boggs
 

Powered by Artwork Archive