Bursley Ware Coffee Service, Bacchus pattern, 1920s
| Starting Bid: | £80.00 |
| Bid Increment: | £5.00 |
| Next Min Bid: | £85.00 |
| Buyer’s Premium: | £19.20 |
| Total Amount: | £99.20 |
| Number of Bids: | 0 |
| Location: | United Kingdom |
| Highest Bidder: | |
| Auction Start: | 14/04/26 15:50:00 UTC |
| Auction Ending: | 29/04/26 19:46:00 UTC |
| Time Remaining: | 14d 20h 18m |
Bursley Ware Coffee Service, Bacchus pattern, 1920s
This is a rarely found coffee service, possibly complete, produced by the firm Bursley Ltd at the Crown Pottery, Burslem, Staffordshire, probably in the 1920s. It comprises a coffee pot and cover, milk jug, sugar basin and four coffee cans and saucers, the forms of the three serving pieces quite distinctive and blending the Art Nouveau and Art Deco styles. The light yellow ground has a craquelure effect to the glaze which may well possibly be original to the manufacture. It is decorated with a design of grapes and trailing vine with deep blue borders, hence the pattern name ‘Bacchus’ shown on the footrim which also carries the manufacturer’s name.Bursley Ltd was the creation of Frederick Read who, in collaboration with Harry Wood, bought the Crown Pottery works in 1920 and began manufacturing art pottery there under this new name. Previous to this Read had been employed as the Art Director for Wood and Sons, a firm which traced its origins back to the mid nineteenth century and of which Harry Wood, a descendant of the founders, was to become Chairman in 1921. Bursley Ltd, while independent, was a subsidiary of Wood and Sons who also had associations with other potteries in the area. Frederick Read was soon joined by his daughter Charlotte, whose designs became famous, but the designs and pattern here may well have been his own creation. Since the marks include the wording ‘registration applied for’, this service must have been one of Bursley’s first productions and it may have been taken over from Wood and Sons themselves since other pieces are found in identical shapes and decoration and titled ‘Bacchus’ but with a mark for H.H.&Co Ltd, the early name, used from 1913 to 1922 of the firm Hales Hancock and Godwin who were agents and retailers for various of the Staffordshire potteries including Wood and Sons.
There is, then, a slightly complex history here but we most likely have an early example of Read’s designs for his newly established business which went on, with the help of his daughter, to produce many innovative pieces of art pottery in the 1920s and 1930s.
Sizes
(i) Coffee Pot : Ht (max) 20.3cm, Width (max) 19cm, Depth (max) 10.5cm, Base 8cm (ii) Sugar Basin : Ht (max) 6cm, Width (max) 10cm, Depth (max) 7.5cm, Base 5.6cm (iii) Milk Jug : Ht (max) 11.5cm, Width (max) 10.5cm , Depth (max) 6cm, Base 5cm (iv) Coffee Can : Ht 5.2cm, Diam 5.2cm, Width (max) 7cm [One with three minute chips at the top] (v) Saucer : Diam 11.5cm, Ht 1.8cm, Base 4.5cm
| Size: | See catalogue description |
| Weight: | 1.275kg |
| Date: | 1920s |
| Condition: | Good condition generally, all pieces with slight glaze crazing, probably original. |
| Estimate: | £200 – 300 |
