More Woolworths than Wedgewood: Leeds students curate exhibition of Hunslet pottery
The earthenware dinner sets they turned out were more Woolworths than Wedgwood but they were a fixture on the sideboards of middle-class homes across the county for generations.
Most were broken up long ago, but a few surviving relics of the fashion for so-called creamware – plain pots that would serve as status symbols as readily they could serve salad – are now being dusted off for a new exhibition.
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Hide AdThe display, and the story of the city’s crockery heritage, has been pieced together by MA students at Leeds University learning the art of museum curation.
The pots would have served originally as the “best china” in households that would never have aspired to Royal Doulton but whose occupants could nevertheless splash out occasionally on small luxuries, said Beth Arscott, one of the trainee curators.
The old plates, cups and “bon bon bowls”, dating from the 1760s to the late 19th century, were handed down through the generations and are still to be found in the display cabinets of traditional Yorkshire homes today.
Some have Willow patterns and Chinese-influenced stylings, but, said Ms Arscott, “most are plain – no decorations, no frills and no fancies. It meant the potteries could save production costs by not paying decorative painters.”
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Hide AdLeeds Pottery in Hunslet was region’s biggest producer of creamware, and exported its plates across Europe. It closed in 1881, and the site on Dewsbury Road, which had housed a row of huge brick kilns, was later the home of the corporation gas works.
“It wasn’t on the same scale as the Potteries in the Midlands, but it was a big industry in the area and a lot of people were employed in it,” said Ms Arscott.
By the mid-19th century, creamware had become sufficiently affordable for even lower class-families to dabble in it,
“Yorkshire pottery is a real economic indicator of this period, when the middle classes were expanding,” Ms Arscott added.
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Hide Ad“The parents and grandparents of most of the people who bought this couldn’t have afforded things which were decorative as well as useful.”
The 22 items on show at the university’s Stanley and Audrey Burton Gallery have been drawn from the in-house art store, and include examples of twisted rope handles, braidings and flutings intended to make the crockery look more expensive than it actually was.
“It was obviously made quite cheaply and a lot of it is much lighter than you would expect,” Ms Arscott said.
The exhibition in Leeds University’s Parkinson building is open until March.