An Attractive Pair of Regency Period Black Japanned & Hand-Painted Pontypool Toleware Chestnut Urns c.1810-20

SOLD
Origin: British
Period: Regency
Provenance: Unknown
Date: c.1810-20
Height: 12”
Width: 7” (at handles)
Depth: 4.5” (each and at extremities)

The exquisitely proportioned pair of chestnut urns, of classical form, each showing the original black japanned decoration, now with a superb patination, and with acorn finials, lion mask ring handles and flower painted decoration to each to include yellow hibiscus and red poinsettias, surviving from the first quarter of the nineteenth century and almost certainly, Pontypool, Wales.

There are minor faults apparent from the illustrations, paint scratches and wear with some paint fleck losses commensurate with use. There is some mis-shapening to the lids, though they still sit relatively well flush and a couple of small dents to the bodies. The urns essentially remain complete and un-meddled with, which is very appealing, with the black japanning having taken on a lustrous patina.

Toleware refers to kitchen-related objects created from metal, typically tin or thin steel, and are often in decorative styles such as Arts and Crafts and Regency as we see here. Decorative painting on these items is common but is not always the case. This style of decorative art spread from Europe, where it was referred to as Japanning, to the United States in the 18th century. In the 19th Century, the towns of Usk and Pontypool in South Wales were well known for producing toleware goods, particularly using the Japanning process, as we see here.

N.B. See Shirley Spaulding DeVoe, The Art of the Tinsmith - English and American, Pennsylvania, 1981 Chapter 2, pp. 15-26 for a similar pair.

In desirable untouched condition; a very elegant pair of Regency finery.
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