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Books > Arts & Architecture > Antiques & collectables > Ceramics & glass
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Poole Pottery (Paperback)
Loot Price: R256
Discovery Miles 2 560
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Poole Pottery (Paperback)
Series: Shire Library
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Loot Price R256
Discovery Miles 2 560
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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Poole Pottery is recognized as one of the most distinctive and most
collected potteries of the twentieth century. Founded by Jesse
Carter in 1873, by the 1880s the factory was well known for its
tiling products, mosaic flooring and advertising panels. After the
turn of the century the company flourished in the hands of the
founder's sons, developing the hand-decorated style that would be
their signature for many years to come.
In 1921, Charles Carter, the respected designer Harold Stabler, and
the husband and wife John and Truda Adams established a subsidiary
that would establish Poole as one of the centres of ceramic arts.
The firm began to draw inspiration from many historical styles and
cultures including Egyptian, Grecian and the Middle East all
combined with the revival of the Delftware technique of freehand
painting on a white tin glazed ground.
Throughout the 1920s and '30s Poole became synonymous with elegant
and expertly executed wares produced in a daring and highly
decorative style of modernism. The firm grew rapidly and employed a
number of key artists and decorators who in turn brought their own
ideas to the table.
Post-war production was mostly based on pre-war designs, but in
1958 the company developed a whole new range of 'studio ware'. The
Studio was seen as a design hot bed, with nothing off limits and no
treatments or techniques out of bounds. The pieces from this period
were expensive to produce, but the level of production and quality
of design put Poole firmly at the front of the British craft
pottery movement. This range became the basis for the more
commercial Delphis range, which found immediate success and helped
the company maintain its market position.
The end of the twentieth century was a more difficult time for
Poole, but it remains one of the great names of British ceramics
and the decorative arts. In this highly illustrated introduction
Poole devotee and expert Will Farmer tells the story of this
remarkable and popular firm.
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