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Adrienne T. Boggs

Albuquerque, NM

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Kew by E. F. Bodley & Son, Image 1.
Kew by E. F. Bodley & Son, Image 2.
Kew by E. F. Bodley & Son, Image 3.
Kew by E. F. Bodley & Son, Image 4.
  • E. F. Bodley & Son
  • Kew, c. 1887
  • Earthenware
  • 13 x 10 in (33.02 x 25.4 cm)
  • Not For Sale
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Platter, 13 x 10 inches. Brown transfer. Printed and impressed maker's marks for E. F. Bodley & Son. The impressed '87' suggests a manufacture date of 1887. This border-only pattern consists of leafy branches on a trellis of crisscrossed slats, stretching down into the well of the platter. This motif is bordered on top and bottom by a narrow band of squares with alternating motifs consisting of stylized foliage and geometric patterns.

The Scotia Works was originally the parish workhouse of Burslem and was calculated to accommodate three hundred inmates On the establishment of unions under the Poor Law Act when the new union workhouse was erected this building was occupied as barracks and so continued for some years. It was then converted into a manufactory by Mr. James Vernon in 1857 and he in 1862 was succeeded by the firm of Edward F. Bodley & Co. At these works the usual descriptions of earthenware, printed, enameled, and gilt and ironstone china for steamship and hotel use were made. Between 1863 and 1865, the pottery was operated by the Bodley & Harrold partnership. In 1880 the company changed to Edward F. Bodley & Sons, who in 1881 removed to the New Bridge Pottery, Longport.
The Hill Pottery China Works in 1867 were carried on by Messrs. Alcock, Diggory & Co. In 1870 the firm was altered into that of Bodley and Diggory, but in the following year Mr. Diggory, having retired, the manufactory was continued by Mr. Edward F. Bodley. In 1874 the style was again changed to Bodley and Son and in 1875 to Edwin J. D. Bodley. The productions formerly embraced china earthenware and Parian but were later entirely confined to china. A specialty of Mr. Bodley's productions was that of pans and vases for chandeliers and lamps. These were made of various forms, and more or less highly decorated; they formed an important branch of manufacture. Services of all the usual kinds, more or less elaborately decorated, were also made. The markets supplied were the home and the South Australian, New Zealand, and Colonial.

  • Subject Matter: Aesthetic (Floral & Botanical)
  • Collections: Aesthetic Transferware, E. F. Bodley & Son

Other Work From Adrienne T. Boggs

Khartoum by S. & P.
Khartoum by S. & P.
Kingfisher by Cumberlidge & Humphreys
Kingfisher by Cumberlidge & Humphreys
Kingfisher by Cumberlidge & Humphreys
Kingfisher by Cumberlidge & Humphreys
Kent by Whittaker, Heath & Co.
Kent by Whittaker, Heath & Co.
Kent by George Jones & Sons
Kent by George Jones & Sons
Kent by Furnivals
Kent by Furnivals
Kent by Ford & Sons
Kent by Ford & Sons
Kensington by Ridgways
Kensington by Ridgways
Kew by Brown-Westhead, Moore & Co.
Kew by Brown-Westhead, Moore & Co.
Kew by Brown-Westhead, Moore & Co.
Kew by Brown-Westhead, Moore & Co.
See all artwork from Adrienne T. Boggs
 

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