| Notes: Minor shelf wear, binding tight, pages clean and unmarked. The newest book on Bow porcelain is written by an inveterate collector who illustrates some rare objects and discusses them in their aesthetic context. The book has been hailed for its innovative look into this the largest, most interesting, most English of the fledgling European softpaste porcelain factories.Among the rare objects are: the only known polychrome figure of Quin as Falstaff, a previously unrecorded plat menage of ten shell dishes, a very rare centerpiece in famille rose with original six cups, five white Muses with eleven other rare figures by the Muses Modeller, an apparently unique pair of Mongolian busts, and a bagpiper (puppeteer) with two marionettes en planchette, plus several other objects previously unpublished.The author is concerned chiefly with the early sculptural products during Thomas Frye's brilliant leadership. A distinctive feature is the inquiry into the lives of men and women who influenced style and design at Bow. Along with Frye were David Garrick, William Hogarth, Henry Fielding, James Quin, Kitty Clive, Moses Mendez, George Frederick Handel, Henry Woodward, the Rev. Richard Knightly, plus others such as Thames watermen, or street criers, or entertainers.The author was one of the founders of the San Francisco Ceramic Circle and its first president. He has been a member of the American Ceramic Circle and the English Ceramic Circle.The size of the book is 8 X 11 inches, 154 pages with 175 illustrations plus 23 in color. |