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Description
Autumnal Delight: Nested Pearlware Dishes
Object: Set of Four Nested Serving Dishes
Origin: England
Date: Circa 1800
Medium: Pearlware Earthenware, …
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Autumnal Delight: Nested Pearlware Dishes
Object: Set of Four Nested Serving Dishes
Origin: England
Date: Circa 1800
Medium: Pearlware Earthenware, Hand-painted Enamels, and Cobalt Underglaze
Dimensions: Set measures from 7 inches long x 1 inch high down to 4 1/2 inches long x 1/4 inch high.
This charming set of four graduated, or nested, pearlware dishes represents the fusion of decorative fashion and practicality that defined English tablewares around the turn of the 19th century. Designed to fit inside one another for storage and presentation, the set would have been a prized component of a formal dessert service.
Design and Technique
The dishes exhibit the classic shell-edged pattern, a distinctive feature of high-quality pearlware and creamware of the period. Here, the scalloped rim is bordered in a vibrant green enamel, meticulously applied to mimic the natural texture of a scallop shell. The central decoration showcases a bold, hand-painted oak leaf design surrounded by trailing floral sprigs in soft yellows and oranges—an unusual and striking motif that suggests an autumnal theme.
The underlying pearlware body, a refined earthenware developed by Josiah Wedgwood and rapidly adopted by rival potters, is noted for its slightly bluer-tinged glaze (due to the addition of a small amount of cobalt oxide) which makes the white ground appear cleaner and brighter than earlier creamware, allowing the hand-painted colors to pop with remarkable clarity.
Historical Context: The Domestic Dessert Service
Nested dishes were popular components of the elaborate 18th and 19th-century dessert course, used to serve various sweetmeats, jellies, and preserved fruits. Their nested form was highly valued for its efficiency and aesthetic appeal. The oak leaf motif carries a symbolic weight, often associated with strength, loyalty, and British patriotism during the Georgian era, giving this otherwise domestic piece a subtle national significance.
Potential References
This type of tableware is closely associated with general shell-edged and pearlware literature:
Edwards, Diana and Hampson, Rodney: English Earthenware and Porcelain: An Historical Survey (General context for early 19th-century pottery production).
George, J. C. and Miller, G. K.: Diagnostic Artifacts in Maryland: Edged Wares (Provides detailed archaeological and historical dating references for shell-edged wares, particularly regarding rim styles).
Lockett, Terence A.: Staffordshire Pottery: The Rise and Fall of the Potteries (Context for the rise of pearlware and its competition with creamware).
Collection Focus: Museum collections, such as the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, which specialize in English ceramic exports to the American market, often feature comparable shell-edged and nested serving pieces.
(Ref: NY8428/nprr)
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