Homes Antiques

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
Inspired by European earthenware English pottery Minton & Co launched a
range of brightly coloured low-temperature lead-glazed pieces at The Great
Exhibition in 1851 as ‘Palissy ware’ which later become known as ‘majolica’.
Other potteries such as George Jones and Wedgwood began to manufacture their
own versions and by the 1880s the name majolica was commonly applied to all
such wares whether made by Minton or not.
‘Majolica vases are very ornate’ says Ben Tulk director of Madelena Antiques
& Collectables. ‘The majority are decorated with Darwin-related naturalistic
designs adorned with flora and fauna such as cockerels peacocks frogs lizards
and flowers but there are a few geometric ones too.’
Prices start at around £10–£20 for a continental unmarked majolica vase
that’s damaged. At the top end an exceptional marked vase of monumental scale
by an English maker such as Minton or Jones could fetch up to £35000. ‘There’s
something to suit every budget so it’s easy to start a collection’ says Tulk. ‘Also
the glazes are enduring so majolica vases can still be used for flowers today.’

For over 100 years Japan isolated itself
from the outside world by all but closing
her frontiers until 1854 and the Treaty
of Yokohama when Japanese trade with
Western nations resumed.
When Japanese pottery (mostly
‘Satsuma’ ware) and porcelain (‘Imari’
‘Kutani’ and ‘Arita’ ware) flooded into
Europe the asymmetry of the designs
took Europeans by surprise.
‘Much of this ceramic flood
resurfaces at the Antiques Roadshow
to general disappointment of owners’
says Lars Tharp. ‘But occasionally
a gem by Makuzu Kozan from the
Fukagawa factory or by Kinkozan and
Yabu Meizan will appear – these names
command four and sometimes five-
figure sums while their mass-produced
(transfer or stencil-printed) relations
struggle to rise into three figures.’
Tharp says that a pair of Imari vases
(with or without lids from 12in to 27in)
could start at £90 and rise to £2000
although this assumes perfect condition
which is rarely the case.
‘Since the catastrophic Kobe
earthquake of 1995 traditional Japanese
works of art from the 17th century to
the early 20th century have slumped
in value excepting those superlative
examples of porcelain metalwork or
ivory carving from the highest – and
very rarest – makers’ reveals Lars.
Once you can tell the dierence
between hand-painted and transfer-
printed and once you know your
porcelain (translucent) from your
earthenware (not translucent) you are
on the right path.
If you group a few together they
can provide an attractive focal point.
‘In an uncluttered white interior a
splash of Imari or Kutani and maybe
even Satsuma will leap out of a cool
background’ says Lars. ‘Rather than
buying a cheap mass-produced vase
dig deeper into your pocket: buy a piece
of real quality something that will
sustain.’ The timeless appeal of this style
will never go out of fashion.

MAJOLICA VASES


JAPANESE VASES


H&A LIFESTYLE: Antiques


H&A SUMMER 2017 41
Free download pdf