Details

Title

Ewer

Artist/Maker

Ott and Brewer

Date

1882–1890

Medium

Porcelain with polychrome and gilt decoration

Dimensions

13 1/4 x 9 x 6 5/8 inches

Credit

Virginia Carroll Crawford Collection

Accession #

1984.140

On View

On View - Stent Family Wing, Level 3, Gallery 302

This ewer’s diagonal composition of overglaze enamel decoration with silver and gilt details was inspired by the late-nineteenth-century taste for Japanese designs and motifs. Although no prototype in Japanese porcelain has been identified, the ewer seems to be based on European interpretations of Japanese form and decoration. The blue and purple colors and the gilding would have required more than one firing, and the birds and plants are gilt. With its delicate, gilt twig-shaped handle, this ewer was undoubtedly ornamental rather than functional. It is made of Belleek porcelain, an exceedingly thin, ivory-colored ceramic covered with an iridescent glaze that was originally produced in Ireland. Ott and Brewer became the first American enterprise to manufacture Belleek-type wares after the arrival of Irish immigrant William Bromley, Jr., to the factory in 1882.