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14th to 18th Century European Earthenware and Stoneware

Collection Info
14th to 18th Century European Earthenware and Stoneware

The Gardiner Museum’s holdings highlight important developments in the history of European earthenware from the fourteenth to the eighteenth centuries, including tin-glazed earthenware, English slipware and creamware. Earthenware is the term given to ceramics that have been fired at a comparatively low temperature and have not vitrified. They have opaque bodies and are often glazed to make them impervious to liquids. Different types of earthenwares are given specific names that distinguish their bodies, glazes and decoration.

An important area of focus is tin-glazed earthenware produced in Italy, France and England, where it was known as maiolica, faïence and delftware respectively. Tin-glazed earthenware first appeared in the ninth century in present day Iraq, and involved the addition of ashes of tin to a lead glaze to create an opaque white surface for decoration in emulation of Chinese porcelain. Throughout the next five centuries, knowledge of tin-glazing spread throughout the Middle East and the Mediterranean. The movement of objects and people further prompted its dissemination to Italy, and Northern Europe.

European Earthenware Collections:

English Delftware

English Slipware

Creamware

French Faience

Italian Maiolica

Other European Earthenware and Stoneware

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33 results
Charger with portrait of Charles II
c.1685
Object number: G83.1.412
Charger with William III and Mary II
c.1690-1700
Object number: G83.1.418
Charger with the Duke of Marlborough
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.421
Charger with Adam and Eve
c.1690
Object number: G83.1.424
Charger with flowers in a vase
c.1660-1680
Object number: G83.1.428
Charger with equestrian figure
c.1700
Object number: G83.1.435
Posset pot with chinoiseries
1687
Object number: G83.1.444
Dish with reticulated border
1674
Object number: G83.1.463
Plate with chinoiserie design
1690
Object number: G83.1.467
Washbowl with chinoiserie design
c.1695-1710
Object number: G83.1.475
Plate with a woman smoking a pipe
1700
Object number: G83.1.476
Wash basin with bird design
c.1700-1720
Object number: G83.1.481
Plate with Order of the Garter and 'IHS'
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.483
Plate with woman supporting a bucket
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.484
Plate with lion
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.485
Plate with bird
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.486
Plate with a swan
c.1710
Object number: G83.1.487
Scroll saltcellar with chinoiserie design
c.1690-1700
Object number: G83.1.532
Two-handled garden urn with chinoiserie design
c.1690-1700
Object number: G83.1.534
Jar painted in the Dutch-style
c.1700-1710
Object number: G83.1.540
Punch bowl painted in the Dutch-style
1714
Object number: G83.1.541
Plate with stylized leaf design
c.1720-1730
Object number: G99.9.16
Plate with stylized foliate design
c.1730-1740
Object number: G99.9.17