Plaque

Description

English ceramist John Bennett created the distinct style of this floral plaque by painting the design in tinted slip, or liquid clay and then finishing it with a clear glaze. Bennett first developed this technique while working at the London pottery firm Doulton and Company, but after exhibiting “Bennett ware” to great acclaim at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition, the artist to relocated to New York. This plaque, produced shortly after he arrived in the United States, reveals his ongoing indebtedness to British Aesthetic Movement design, which looked to nature and often involved dense, all-over floral and foliage motifs.

Provenance

With Anthony A. P. Stuempfig, Nineteenth Century American Masterpieces, Philadelphia, by June 17, 1998 [incoming receipt, RX22022, June 17, 1998; copy in curatorial object file]; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1998.

Plaque

John Bennett

1879

Accession Number

150063

Medium

Earthenware, glaze, slip, and enamel

Dimensions

H.: 46.7 cm (18 3/8 in.)

Classification

plaque (flat object)

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Through prior acquisitions of the George F. Harding Collection, an anonymous donor, Bessie Bennett, Mrs. William Blood, Emily Crane Chadbourne, Milton Straus, Elizabeth R. Vaughan, Behrend/Sanford Auction and Thorne Rooms Exhibition funds