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Grigsby, Leslie B. (Leslie Brown) / The Longridge collection of English slipware and delftware. Volume 1: slipware
(2000)
Fuddling cups, pp. 138-139
Page 138
SLIPWARE Beverage Wares Fuddling Cups S77, S78. FUDDLING CUPS Donyatt, Somerset (S77) Dated 1733 (S78) Dated 1734 (or 1739) (Both) H.: 2 3/4" (7 cm): Diam. (greatest, with handles): S 3/8" (13.7 cm) BODY CLAY: Medium-grained red. LEAD GLAZE: (177) Slightly muddy. (577, 578) Irregular green blotched. Overall, excluding bottoms (with glaze overrun from sides), SHAPE: Thrown, joined, and pierced. (S78) Pulled handles, convex on interi- ors and exteriors. (577, S78) Twisted pairs of rolled strips join vessels to one another Slightly concave bottoms. SLIP GROUND: Cream-colored. Overall, excluding (S77) interior and (S78) exterior lower extreme of wall and bottom. DECORATION: Sgraffito. Floral motifs. (S77) Inscribed "As A Ring is Round," "And hath no end Is," "Love unto my frend," and "EH/1733." (S78) Inscribed "my joy Shall," "be in," "Christ on HiGe," and "IW/1734 [or 1739?]." Ex coll.: (578) M. D. Block. Fuddling cups, used during drinking games, are composed of joined clusters of small vessels with interiors linked through holes in the walls. The earliest dated English examples are three-part London delftware types (see also nos. 1)208, D290, D291, D293,,D295) from 1633., A 1684 sgraffito fuddling cup is the earliest known dated slipware example and is attributed to Donyatt in Somerset, the sotrce of the cups shown here.' Typical Donyatt examples include triangular arrangements of three to six ves- sels with traditional abstract designs and flowers, especially tulips, carved through a cream-colored slip ground. Unevenly applied green speckling is another common feature. Religious inscriptions, as on the 1734(?) fi-ddling cup (no. S78), are extremely uncommon on Donyatt sgraftito ware., In contrast drinking rhymes and secu- lar messages of goodwill abound.1 The 1733 cup (no. S77) reproduces one version of a phrase that appears on English pottery made over more than a century and a half at different centers. A 1633 London delftware mug with the Watermen's and Lightermen's Company arms declares, "A RING IS ROUND J&] HATH NO END/SO IS MY LOVE UNTO MY FRIEND."' A North Devon sgraffito jar made for ferryman Thomas Beat is inscribed slightly differently, "The Ring is Round that hath no End so is my love to you my Friend, January the 21 1796.." b/1 ")/6 138 The Longridge Collection
Copyright Jonathan Horn Publications 2000.| For information on re-use see: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/Copyright




