This 9.25" plate is a wonderful example of design from the late 1800s Aesthetic Movement period in Great Britain. Produced in 1885 by Ridgways in Stoke-on-Trent, the pattern is called "Devonshire" and it features a brown transferware design with hand-colored accents of rust, yellow, blue and green. (Most pieces in this pattern are simply brown and white; it is rare to find the polychrome examples.) The plate is in good antique condition, with no chips or cracks, does have crazing. The colors are still vivid with age darkening to the lighter-colored areas.
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(The Aesthetic Movement was most popular during the last decades of Queen Victoria's reign, primarily 1860-1890. The movement, which encompassed art, furniture, textiles, ceramics and more, aimed to escape the ugliness and materialism of the Industrial Age, focusing instead on producing "art for art's sake." Among the most well known names related to the movement are William Morris, James McNeill Whistler and Oscar Wilde. The European fascination with all things Japanese was revitalized during this period and those elements are evident in this ceramic pattern: the flat panel, or cartouche; asymmetric placement of design elements; natural depictions such as birds, plants, insects, fish. Note the three panels, or cartouches, central to this design: the cock with rising sun, bird after an insect and unusual fish with shells and coral.)