Etruria Works

(Redirected from Etruria works)

The Etruria Works was a ceramics factory opened by Josiah Wedgwood in 1769 in a district of Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England, which he named Etruria. The factory ran for 180 years, as part of the wider Wedgwood business.

Neoclassical "Black Basalt" Ware vase by Wedgwood, c. 1815 AD, imitating "Etruscan" and Greek vase painting style.

Wedgwood kept his old works in the nearby town of Burslem at the Ivy House Works and the Brick House Works (demolished – the Wedgwood Institute is built on its site). At least initially, the Etruria Works made the more expensive "ornamental" stonewares Wedgwood was developing, while Burslem continued to produce the cheaper "useful" wares, such as transfer-printed creamware.

In 1767 Wedgwood paid about three thousand pounds for his new site, which was then known as the Ridgehouse Estate. It lay directly in the path of the Trent and Mersey Canal of which Wedgwood was a promoter. On one side of the canal Wedgwood built a large house, Etruria Hall and on the other side the factory. His architect was Joseph Pickford.

Wedgwood and Etruscan art

edit
 
Jasperware vase and cover. Made by Wedgwood, Etruria, England, about 1790, Unglazed stoneware Victoria and Albert Museum no. 2416-1901[1]

The motto of the Etruria works was Artes Etruriae Renascuntur. This may be translated from the Latin as "The Arts of Etruria are reborn".[2] Wedgwood was inspired by ancient pottery then generally described as Etruscan, but now known to be mostly Ancient Greek pottery. In particular, he was interested in the painted vases which Sir William Hamilton began to collect in the 1760s while serving as British Ambassador to the Kingdom of Naples.[3] Hamilton's collections were published as Etruscan, although the term was a misnomer, as many of the "Etruscan" items turned out to be pottery of ancient Greece.[a]

More authentically Etruscan in inspiration was Wedgwood's black basalt stoneware, which was already in development as the Etruria works were being built and came on the market in 1768. As with the black, burnished and unglazed bucchero pottery characteristic of genuinely Etruscan ceramics,[5] Wedgwood's "Black Basaltes" were fired in a reducing atmosphere, achieved by closing vents, where the oxygen-starved flames drew off the oxygen from iron oxides, rendering the ceramic body black, a color that was enriched and deepened with the addition of manganese to the clay.[6]

The designers employed by Wedgwood, of whom John Flaxman is the most famous, were able to adapt this classical art for the eighteenth-century market.[b] The products of Wedgwood's factory were greatly admired in Britain and abroad. Some of Flaxman's designs are still in production today.

Factory organisation

edit

Wedgwood used division of labour.[8] The site, its appearance and organisation was documented in Artes Etruriae renascuntur; a record of the historical old works at Etruria as they exist today, forming an [sic] unique example of an eighteenth century English factory (1920).

The twentieth century

edit

There is a description of Etruria in the 1930s in J. B. Priestley's English Journey.[9] By this time the site was affected by mining subsidence, and plans were drawn for a new factory at Barlaston some miles south on the Trent and Mersey Canal. The new factory was built in 1938–40 and most of the old factory was demolished in the twentieth century after the Wedgwood company moved production to Barlaston.

The site today

edit

Little remains of the factory today, although one surviving structure has been protected since the 1970s as a listed building.[10]

Between 1986 and 2013 the local newspaper The Sentinel was based on part of the site.[11] As well as The Sentinel, the print plant in Etruria was responsible for printing Northern editions of the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday.[citation needed]

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Winckelmann's Geschichte der Kunst des Alterthums ("The History of Art in Antiquity") of 1764 first refuted the Etruscan origin of what we now know to be Greek pottery. Hamilton independently came to the conclusion that he was collecting pottery of Greek origin.[4]
  2. ^ An example of pottery used by Wedgwood as source material is the hydria[7]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Jasperware vase and cover". Collections. London: Victoria and Albert Museum.
  2. ^ "Welcome". Wedgwood Museum. Archived from the original on 31 July 2008.
  3. ^ "Portrait plaque of Sir William Hamilton". British Museum. Retrieved 6 November 2012.
  4. ^ "The Hunt Krater". British Museum. London.
  5. ^ "Bucchero".
  6. ^ "Black basalts". Wedgwood Museum.
  7. ^ Red-figured water jar (hydria), signed by Meidias as potter. British Museum. London.
  8. ^ McKendrick, Neil (1961). "Josiah Wedgwood and Factory Discipline". The Historical Journal. 4 (1). Cambridge University Press: 30–55. JSTOR 3020380.
  9. ^ Drabble, Margaret (26 January 2008). "In the Path of Priestley". The Guardian.
  10. ^ "Round House, Etruria"., Listed Buildings in Stoke-on-Trent and area (photo of "round house" on local history website).
  11. ^ "The Sentinel, Etruria Valley". The People's Archive. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.