Additional information:
Medium: Earthenware with painted ruby lustre over tin-glaze
Diameter 36 cm (14 1/8 in)
Signed with monogram and dated with cypher on underside
Aldermaston Pottery was a pottery located in the Berkshire village of Aldermaston, England. It was founded in 1955 by Alan Caiger-Smith and was known for its tin-glaze pottery and particularly its lustre ware. His first assistant, Geoffrey Eastop, joined him in 1956, a year after the pottery started. They were joined in 1961 by David Tipler and Edgar Campden, who remained there until 1975 and 1993 respectively. Over a period of forty years, around sixty assistants worked at the pottery.
In 1965, the pottery was the subject of a television documentary produced by Michael Darlow. The pottery scaled back its production in June 1993 when Caiger-Smith partially retired and stopped hiring assistants. It continued to be operated commercially until it was sold in 2006, and the building has now been converted into a private property.
Reading Museum has an extensive collection of Aldermaston pottery displayed in its Atrium gallery. The pottery can also be seen on display at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London and the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford.
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Creation Year:Circa 1997
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Dimensions:Height: 14.125 in (35.88 cm)Diameter: 14.125 in (35.88 cm)
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Medium:Earthenware
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Period:21st Century
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Condition:Excellent
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Gallery Location:Kingsclere, GB
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Reference Number:Seller: LU2718214576982
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