01357

01357

Fragment Found by: Laurence Payne

Fragment Found in: London, England

Fragment Found on: the Thames Foreshore

Fragment Found on: 29/05/2023

Comments/Information/Identification: The illustrated image is printed in black and it would have been titled “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”.Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin was the best-selling American novel of the nineteenth century and was one of the most influential attacks on slavery ever written, and has been credited with being one of the causes of the American Civil War. The novel generated an outpouring of books, plays, music, prints, and objects such as plates. This is a decorative and highly collectable piece of antique literary pearlware pottery dating from circa 1855. The plate has no maker’s mark, and the maker is unknown.

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News/Events

Imaginary Artefacts is an artistic project in development alongside the Fragment Found archive. Selected submissions will be reworked, using the small pieces of printed imagery as a starting point to create elaborate drawings of what the pattern may once have looked like. The newly created pattern will be applied to ceramic wares (vases, pots, plates, and so on) using traditional transfer printing techniques. In doing so, lost histories are pieced together and reconstructed with fictional narratives told through the illustrations and the forms and functions of the objects.

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About

Established in October 2021, Fragment Found is an ever-growing online archive of printed pottery sherds. It invites the public to submit their finds and crowdsources information about their history and identity via the ‘comments’ section beneath each sherd. The website is a digital museum of lost, broken, unwanted and discarded artefacts, rediscovered centuries later in fields, on beaches, in rivers, etc. The archive connects people, places, craft, local heritage and the natural environment. The aim is to build a community which centres around the joy of collecting, identifying and sharing mysterious pieces of history, which would otherwise remain undocumented. Selected fragments will become part of a series of ceramic artworks called ‘Imaginary Artefacts.’

History

Transfer printing on pottery was first used in the UK in the 1750s and became a large and profitable part of the ceramics industry during the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. It had a global appeal, with large amounts shipped across the world. Due to the affordability of mass-produced items, examples could be seen in many homes: crockery, food and cosmetics containers, as well as decorative items such as vases and pots. Despite its widespread use and appreciation, the skills involved in making printed pottery are today on the Red List of Endangered Crafts. Only one Staffordshire pottery continues to produce this ware using traditional techniques. These skills are under threat of disappearing entirely and with them, transferprinted pottery itself.

People

Fragment Found is a project initiated by Eva Jack (Artist). The website has been built by Becky Sparks (Graphic Designer). The project has been made possible with funding from Creative Scotland.