Teapot
CultureEnglish
Dateca. 1750-1770
MediumVariegated earthenware with lead glaze
DimensionsOverall: 5 1/8 × 8 × 2 3/4 inches (13.02 × 20.32 × 6.99 cm)
Credit LineGift of Frank P. Burnap
Object number54-38 A,B
On View
On viewGallery Location
- 112
Collections
DescriptionOblong shape, bracket feet, loop handle. Animal head forms spout, and the cover is topped by a reclining lion. Cream-yellow body has inserts of brown, vertical stripes in bowed, double lines interwoven with fine brown veins.Gallery LabelClays of different colors were wedged together to create a variegated appearance in imitation of agate, a type of quartz. The glazes were colorless; therefore the decorative effect is derived solely from the colors and patterns of the clay. The agateware body was used almost exclusively for small objects such as tea and coffee wares, however agateware was also used for decorative figures such as the Pug Dog and Hare, whose black and white coats are fashioned from the clays' patterns.
Mr. Frank P. Burnap (1861-1957), Kansas City, MO by 1954;
His gift to The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, 1954,.
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41-23/7 A,B