Ewenny Pottery Beaker, signed, late C20th
| Starting Bid: | £10.00 |
| Bid Increment: | £1.00 |
| Next Min Bid: | £11.00 |
| Buyer’s Premium: | £2.40 |
| Total Amount: | £12.40 |
| Number of Bids: | 0 |
| Location: | United Kingdom |
| Highest Bidder: | |
| Auction Start: | 21/11/25 13:15:00 UTC |
| Auction Ending: | 06/12/25 20:32:00 UTC |
| Time Remaining: | 13d 15h 12m |
Ewenny Pottery Beaker, signed, late C20th
A studio pottery beaker of broad flaring form with a stepped base, channelled at the top, the interior glazed with pronounced potting rings and the base also glazed with an incised script mark ‘Ewenny Pottery’, the main body coloured in mottled grey/green and the interior and base in mottled brown.There has been a pottery at the small Welsh town of Ewenny since 1610, the area around being, at the time, a fertile source of clay. In the early 1800s Evan Jenkins married Mary, the daughter of then owner John Morgan, and this began a period of ownership by the Jenkins family which continues today, the studio and shop being run by Alun Jenkins and his daughter Caitlin, who is the eighth generation member of the business (see image XXXX). Their mark can be seen at ‘British Studio Potters’ Marks’ by Eric Yates-Owen and Robert Fournier (2nd edition 2005 p157). Production has tended to concentrate on modest utilitarian items, hand potted and finished with the distinctive glazes for which the studio is known which involve dipping the pot in one glaze adding another with the splash technique and firing the item so that the two glazes fuse. The effects seen on this beaker are typical of their work as is also the clear evidence of hand throwing. Ewenny pieces are made and sold today, but the current catalogue does not list items exactly similar to this, so a late twentieth century dating is the most likely.
| Size: | Ht 9cm, Top diam 9.2cm, Base 5.5cm |
| Weight: | 180gm |
| Date: | Late C20th |
| Condition: | Good condition, no issues. |
| Estimate: | £20 – 30 |
