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Jasperware, or
jasper ware, is a type of
pottery first developed by
Josiah Wedgwood in the 1770s.
Usually described as stoneware, it has an
unglazed matte...
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Wedgwood is
especially ****ociated with the "dry-bodied" (unglazed)
stoneware Jasperware in
contrasting colours, and in
particular that in "Wedgwood blue" and...
- who
appears to have
added modesty drapery. The vase
formed the
basis of
Jasperware. A
consequence of
these military and
artistic endeavours was a m****ive...
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invention that
Wedgwood produced –
green glaze, creamware,
black basalt, and
jasperware – was
quickly copied.
Having once
achieved efficiency in production, he...
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called terracotta, and in
stoneware equivalent unglazed wares (such as
jasperware) are
often called "dry-bodied". Many
types of pottery,
including most...
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century Wedgwood developed a
number of
ceramic bodies. One of these,
Jasperware, is
sometimes classified as
stoneware although its raw
materials differ...
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translucent stoneware called jasperware that was
developed by
Josiah Wedgwood and
perfected in 1775.
Though white-on-blue
matte jasperware is the most familiar...
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Attendee at a Symposium,
biscuit porcelain including the
Jasperware blue, Real Fábrica del Buen Retiro, Madrid, 1784-1803...
- of Art, New York City
Apotheosis of Virgil; by John Flaxman; c.1776;
jasperware; diameter: 41 cm;
Harris Museum, Preston, Lancashire, UK
Somerset House...
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Adams (baptised 1746; died 1805) was an
English potter, a
maker of fine
jasperware shortly after its
development and
introduction to the
English market by...