
Art pottery is a term forpottery with artistic aspirations, made in relatively small quantities, mostly between about 1870 and 1930.[1] Typically, sets of the usualtableware items are excluded from the term; instead the objects produced are mostly decorative vessels such asvases, jugs, bowls and the like which are sold singly. The term originated in the later 19th century, and is usually used only for pottery produced from that period onwards. It tends to be used for ceramics produced in factory conditions, but in relatively small quantities, using skilled workers, with at the least close supervision by a designer or some sort of artistic director.Studio pottery is a step up, supposed to be produced in even smaller quantities, with the hands-on participation of an artist-potter, who often performs all or most of the production stages.[2] But the use of both terms can be elastic.Ceramic art is often a much wider term, covering all pottery that comes within the scope ofart history, but "ceramic artist" is often used for hands-on artist potters in studio pottery.

The term implied both a progressive design style and also a closer relationship between the design of a piece and its production process. Art pottery was part of theArts and Crafts movement, and a reaction to the technically superb but over-ornamented wares made by the large European factories, especially inporcelain.[3] Later art pottery represented the ceramic arm of theAesthetic Movement andArt Nouveau.[4] Many of the wares areearthenware orstoneware, and there is often an interest in East Asian ceramics, especially historical periods when the individual craftsmen had been allowed a large role in the design and decoration. There is often great interest inceramic glaze effects, includinglustreware, and relatively less inpainted decoration (still less intransfer printing).[5]

Throwing pieces on thepotter's wheel, which hardly played any part in the large factories of the day, was often used, and many pieces were effectively unique, especially in their glazes, applied in ways that encouraged random effects. Compared to the production processes in larger factories, where each stage usually involved different workers, the same worker often took a piece through several stages of production, though studio pottery typically took this even further, and several makers of art pottery, if they became successful, drifted back towards conventional factory methods, as cheaper and allowing larger quantities to be made.[6]
The most significant countries producing art pottery were Britain and France, soon followed by the United States.American art pottery has many similarities, but some differences,[7] with its European equivalents. The term is not often used outside the Western world, except in "folk art pottery", often used for some village-basedmingei traditions inJapanese pottery.[8]
The movement was strongly linked with the fashion for national and international competitions and awards in the period, with theWorld's fairs the largest. America's first of these was theCentennial Exposition inPhiladelphia in 1876, which "was a critical catalyst for the development of the American Art Pottery movement", both because American commercial potteries exerted themselves to improve the artistic quality of the products specially made for exhibition, and because American visitors were exposed to a wider range of European and Asian ceramics than hitherto.Doulton appears to have exhibited over 500 pieces of its Lambeth art studio stoneware and Lambeth Faience, and these as well as French "barbotine" and Japanese pieces had a decisive influence on many individuals who went on to become significant in American art pottery.[9]
There were also close links with amateurchina painting, which had become a very popular hobby, especially for middle-class women, in the same decades.[10] In London, theRegent Street jewellersHowell James & Co. became a leading showplace for both amateur and professional work, organizing exhibitions and competitions.[11]

The movement perhaps began in the 1860s. Unlike many terms for styles or movements in art, the name appears to have come from the producers, and was used of their wares by several English manufacturers by the 1870s. In 1870 or 1871Mintons, one of the largeStaffordshire pottery factories, founded in 1793, who had successfully tried to keep up with innovation in design,[13] opened their "Mintons Art Pottery Studio" inKensington Gore, London.[14]
Very many art potteries were newly established, especially in America, but in Europe many long-established ceramic manufacturers embraced the movement, usually by establishing dedicated sections of their business, kept apart from their higher-volume wares.[15] This was especially the case for large English firms who had become mainly associated with less glamorous utilitarian wares. Doulton & Co., laterRoyal Doulton, was hugely profitable from utilitarianstonewares, above all sewage and drain pipes, and able to experiment, establishing links with the nearbyLambeth School of Art. Doulton revived fine English stoneware, and raised its own profile; it is unclear whether the art wares ofLambeth ever made much profit.[16]Maw & Co was, with Mintons, one of the main makers of decorativeencaustic tiles, but launched "Art Pottery" lines by the 1880s, some byWalter Crane, who had been designing tiles for them since the 1870s.[17]

While women made up about half the workforce of the Stoke-on-Trent potteries in Staffordshire in the 20th century, they tended to be assistants to husbands or fathers, doing "coarse and degrading labour", often handling toxic materials. Women could not be apprenticed, and men maintained control of higher-skilled and lucrative positions. There were some exceptions such asDaisy Makeig-Jones, who successfully designed the "Fairyland Lustre" pottery series for Wedgwood.[18]
Conditions, and the potential to rise, were better at the Doulton studios in London.[18][19] The Doulton studios were unusual in this period in allowing the decorators, about half of them female, to sign or initial pieces, and several have acquired individual reputations, like the sistersHannah and Florence Barlow. By 1895 the Doulton studios employed 345 female artists.[20]
A report inThe Art Journal on a visit to Mintons' "Art-pottery studio atSouth Kensington", run by the artistWilliam Stephen Coleman, reported that the designers and decorators there worked segregated by sex, and was at pains to stress the position of the ladies:[21]
... from twenty to twenty-five educated women, of good social position, employed without loss of dignity, and in an agreeable and profitable manner. All have received the necessary Art-instruction, either at theCentral Training Schools at South Kensington, or at theschools at Queen's Square, or atLambeth."

Two of the biggest names, then and now, in the British art pottery scene, offer contrasting degrees of involvement in the actual production process.William De Morgan was not hands-on with the clay as a thrower,[22] while at least three of the fourMartin Brothers were personally engaged in production. They are now regarded as among the earliest makers ofstudio pottery, but that term had not been devised at the time.[23] Another major figure,Christopher Dresser, was a designer whose name is closely associated with theLinthorpe Art Pottery, but may never have actually visited the works in Yorkshire (nowTeesside);[24] he also designed for Mintons (porcelain) and other potteries.[25]
Victoria Bergesen groups the wares into broad stylistic groups. Firstly came stonewares and earthenwares that were initially strongly influenced by historical styles. Then there were painted wares that related to the Aesthetic Movement, and overlapped with amateur china painting. Another group made wares with a rural,folk art, style, often in very small potteries; this perhaps survived the longest, and from the 20th century is often called "craft pottery". Another group was interested in advanced glaze effects, whether trying to recreate historic Asian ones such assang de boeuf glaze (for exampleBernard Moore), or new experimental ones such as the still radioactive orangeuranium glazes.[26] Then came another wave of hand-painting, but less realist, and more geometric and stylized. This style greatly influenced industrial wares after World War I.[27]
American pottery was made by some 200 studios and small factories across the country, with especially strong centres of production inOhio (theCowan,Lonhuda,Owens,Roseville,Rookwood, andWeller potteries) andMassachusetts (theDedham,Grueby, Marblehead, andPaul Revere potteries). With some exceptions like theRookwood Pottery Company, founded in 1880, most producers began making it after 1890 and many after 1900. Some were newly established and other had been making other types of wares. Most of the potteries were forced out of business by the economic pressures of competition from commercial mass-production companies as well as the advent of World War I followed a decade later by theGreat Depression.[28]

In continental Europe parts of thefaience manufacturing sector had managed to survive the onslaught of Englishcreamwares andbone china, and increasingly cheaphard-paste porcelain from local factories, and many of these embraced the movement. In France, which was the most important continental producer, the famousService Rousseau designs inCreil-Montereau faience (1867) were early examples ofJaponisme, and somewhat in the spirit of art pottery, although the service was commissioned by a wholesaler fromFélix Bracquemond, an established artist, and the manufacture contracted out.[30]
The earliest significant figure wasThéodore Deck, who founded his faience works in 1856, and initially explored styles and techniques fromIslamic pottery with great success. WhenJaponisme arrived in the 1870s he embraced this and other art pottery trends with enthusiasm, finally conquering the French establishment when he was made art director ofSèvres porcelain in 1887. Several important figures from the next generation were trained by Deck.[31]
Ernest Chaplet was an artist and hands-on potter, mainly in stoneware, who later worked withPaul Gauguin, whose many ceramic sculptures cannot really be squeezed into the category of art pottery. Much of the ceramic output ofJean-Joseph Carriès, a sculptor who died young in 1894, was also sculpture, including many faces and heads, often with grotesque expressions, but he made several conventional pots, often with thick unctuousash glaze effects in the Japanese style. Other leading figures wereAuguste Delaherche,Edmond Lachenal,Pierre-Adrien Dalpayrat, a great creator of glazes, andClément Massier. The large American-ownedLimoges porcelain firm ofHaviland & Co. was important in encouraging new styles, with much production being exported.[32] Their stand at the 1876 PhiladelphiaCentennial Exposition was one of the important influences there on later American pottery, especially in itsbarbotine painted wares. These, thickly painted withslip, allowed similar effects to theImpressionist paintings being produced in the same period.[33]
The glaze specialistTaxile Doat moved in the opposite direction to others; after nearly 30 years at Sèvres he set up his own small studio in 1895, and in 1909 moved to teach and pot in America.Alexandre Bigot, originally a chemistry teacher, made some pottery himself, with individual glazes, but was mainly notable for his designs for Art Nouveau architectural ceramics, created by his own large firm.[34]Hector Guimard was an Art Nouveau architect and designer, mainly in metal (including thefamous Paris Metro entries) but also designed ceramics, many for Sèvres.[35] A generation later, theMougin brothers emerged around 1900, and worked in Art Nouveau andArt Deco styles until the 1930s.

In the NetherlandsDe Porceleyne Fles had been founded inDelft in 1653, but by 1840 was the onlyDelftware factory left in the city. After appointing Adolf Le Comte as designer in 1877, its products were shifted in the direction of art pottery, though still mostly using the traditional hand-paintedblue and white pottery style.[36] In 1884Theo Colenbrander, like Le Comte initially an architect, took over the Haagsche Plateelbakkerij, Rozenburg inThe Hague, and was considerably more adventurous, but also with an emphasis on painting rather than adventurous shapes.[37] Later they turned with success to Art Nouveau, mostly in porcelain. Most of the best forms were designed by Jurriaan J. Kok and painted bySamuel Schellink, and in contrast the innovative, elegant and elongated shapes were a large part of the appeal.[38]
The large firm ofZsolnay inBudapest specialized in architectural ceramics, introducing new glazes and finishes, but was also very alert to new trends in decorative pottery, with an uninhibited approach to design and colour. From the late 1860s until his death in 1900, it was led byVilmos Zsolnay, son of the founder.[39] Many of Zsolnay's designs had astrongly nationalistic element, drawing shapes from ancient archaeological wares, Islamic ones from the long Ottoman occupation, and contemporary peasant pottery. Ornament and colour were influenced by these and traditional Hungarian clothing and embroidery, both peasant and aristocratic. Vilmos Zsolnay's doughterssJulia andTeréz were collectors of all these, and from the 1870s became involved in the design process of the firm.[40]

The Art pottery movement very largely used forms ofearthenware andstoneware, sometimes revelling in showing the clay body, and sometimes smothering it in thick glazes. The many large European porcelain companies generally stood aloof from these developments, concentrating on tableware, and often struggling to throw off what had become the deadening influence ofRococo andNeoclassical styles. In the 1870s most continued to produce an eclectic variety of revivalist styles, though sometimes experimenting with glazes, as atMeissen porcelain, which began to produce monochrome vases from 1883.[41]
The first major porcelain company to seriously change its styles wasRoyal Copenhagen, which made radical changes from 1883, when it was bought byAluminia, an earthenware company.Arnold Krog, an architect under 30 with no practical experience of the industry, was made artistic director the next year, and rapidly shifted designs in the same directions art pottery was exploring, commissioning many painters to design for the factory. Japanese influences were initially very strong. The new wares soon won prizes at various international exhibitions, and most of the large porcelain makers began to move in similar directions,[42] causing problems for the smaller art potteries.
Art Nouveau produced an upsurge in adventurousart glass, rather to the detriment of pottery. The French artistÉmile Gallé was rather typical, making ceramics early in his career, but largely abandoning them for glass by 1892 (when young he took over the family's factories making both).[43]
In European countries not mentioned above, art pottery was slow to develop, and by the 1890s all the large porcelain factories in Europe were at least beginning to commission designs in Art Nouveau and other styles,[44] tending to suppress the development of smaller potteries. TheBlaue Rispe tableware pattern byRichard Riemerschmid for Meissen is an example – this was not popular on first launch, but was revived much later.[45]Max Laeuger, mainly an architect, was the only very significant 19th-century German art potter, as a designer only, and in an Art Nouveau style from the late 1890s.[46] To a large extent, small art potteries after Art Nouveau are calledstudio pottery, and began exploring new styles and imperatives,[47] although many potteries continued to make pottery in the old spirit until at least World War II, especially in America.[48]
Just general books are given here; there are also large numbers of books on individual potteries.