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A very attractive Art Deco cobalt blue and black Nerton Ware bowl from the Bretby Pottery c1925. This range was produced by Bretby from 1920 to 1928. Blue ground with applied black slip giving a very striking look. Impressed mark for Bretby and design number 1644 (registered c1905). The bowl is 20 cm in diameter and 9.5 cm in height.

 

Henry Tooth left Linthorpe in 1882 to set up Bretby Art Pottery in partnership with William Ault at Woodville, Derbyshire. William Ault left the partnership in 1887 to set up his own Ault pottery (1887 - 1922) at Swadlincote, Derbyshire. After the partnership break, Bretby pottery continued trading as "Tooth & Co" but retained the familiar sun-burst mark. When the Linthorpe Pottery closed in 1889, many of their pottery workers went to work at the Ault, Burmantofts and Bretby potteries, and these potteries purchased many of the moulds used by the Linthorpe pottery. With Christopher Dresser having previously acted as Art Director at Linthorpe and subsequently as a designer at Ault Pottery - much of what these potteries produced where either Dresser designs or were strongly influenced by his designs. After William Ault left the pottery, Henry Tooth became rather adventurous and produced wares in a great variety of styles - often making them difficult to define.By the start of WW1 demand for art pottery had been in decline (ceasing completely during the war) with production in much reduced numbers re-starting after WW1. Both Burmantofts and Ault ceased production of art pottery around this time however the Bretby pottery is documented as continuing to produce art pottery until after the end of World War II. However there is little information available about its type of production since the 1950's - except that it was primarily industrial pottery. The Pottery finally closed in the 1990s.

Tooth & Co Ltd Bretby Pottery Nerton Ware Bowl (c1925)

SKU: EC213
£0.00Price
  • This bowl is in excellent original condition with no cracks, chips, crazing or restoration. Please see images as these form an important part of the description.

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