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  • Object number
    2008/92
  • Collection
    Collecting 20th Century Rural Cultures
  • Creator
    Wedgwood (Manufacturer)
  • Description
    Dinner plate with a transfer printed design by Eric Ravilious. Stamped on the base: ‘Garden designed’, ‘Wedgwood of Etruria and Barlaston’.
    This is a glazed Wedgwood dinner plate with a transfer printed design by Eric Ravilious (1903–1942). Ravilious designed two series of dinner services for Wedgwood – the Garden and the Harvest Festival series on 1938–1939 – and this is from the latter. It is stamped on the base with ‘Garden designed by Ravilious’, the Wedgwood stamp, and ‘Wedgwood of Etruria and Barlaston Made in England’.
  • Physical description
    Dinner plate: glazed with transfer design 'Harvest festival' by Eric Ravilious; good condition
  • Archival history
    MERL OLIB database note – ‘Eric Ravilious (1905–1942), with Paul Nash as one of his teachers and Edward Bawden as a close friend, was an artist and designer who expressed the mood of the inter-war English countryside as powerfully as anyone. His downland scenes of the 1930s, drawing on his Sussex boyhood, are very human in scale and light in touch and yet there is a more sombre tone beneath, part melancholy and part nostalgia for something lost. // Ravilious brought this same perspective into a wide range of commercial design commissions. One claim has it that it was Noel Carrington who introduced him to Wedgwood in 1936. His designs for them, described as examples of archaic modernism, included the Garden and the Harvest Festival dinner services in the years immediately before the Second War. Ravilious died in 1942 whilst on duty as a War Artist with the RAF. Wedgwood revived the two dinner service designs in the 1950s. A plate from each has been acquired for this project.’, Collecting 20thc Rural Culture blog [Thursday, 20 November 2008] – ‘Eric Ravilious // Eric Ravilious (1905-1942), with Paul Nash as one of his teachers and Edward Bawden as a close friend, was an artist and designer who expressed the mood of the inter-war English countryside as powerfully as anyone. His downland scenes of the 1930s, drawing on his Sussex boyhood, are very human in scale and light in touch and yet there is a more sombre tone beneath, part melancholy and part nostalgia for something lost. // Ravilious brought this same perspective into a wide range of commercial design commissions. One claim has it that it was Noel Carrington – see earlier post about Puffin Books – who introduced him to Wedgwood in 1936. His designs for them, described as examples of archaic modernism, included the Garden and the Harvest Festival dinner services in the years immediately before the Second War. Ravilious died in 1942 whilst on duty as a War Artist with the RAF. Wedgwood revived the two dinner service designs in the 1950s. A plate from each has been acquired for this project.'
  • Production place
    Potteries, The
  • Production date
    1938 - 1938
  • Object name
    Plate
  • Material
    Ceramic
  • Technique
    Fired
  • Associated subject
    DOMESTIC AND FAMILY LIFE : serving, eating and drinking
  • Associated person/institution
    Ravilious, Eric (Designer)
  • External document
    • L:\MERL\Objects\JISC 2012\Documents\Scans\2008_92_doc_01.tif - High resolution image
    • L:\MERL\Objects\JISC 2012\Documents\Scans\2008_92_doc_02.tif - High resolution image
    • L:\MERL\Objects\JISC 2012\Documents\Scans\2008_92_doc_03.tif - High resolution image
    • L:\MERL\Objects\JISC 2012\Documents\Scans\2008_92_doc_04.tif - High resolution image
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