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Grigsby, Leslie B. (Leslie Brown) / The Longridge collection of English slipware and delftware. Volume 1: slipware
(2000)
Contributors, p. 13
Page 13
CONTRIBUTORS The term contributors has been chosen for persons who were especially forthcoming with material for this book-going even beyond the generosity of the readers and fellow researchers thanked in the Acknowledgments. The following three individuals were par- ticularly involved in the project: Michael Archer was for thirty years in the ceramics department at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. He retired from that institution as Senior Research Curator in 1996. Michael's well-known and universally respected published work on delftware long ago formed a core reason why many collectors in England and America became interested in the subject. In part because of his work, the author, a child of such collectors, grew to love English earthenware and stoneware and eventually chose a similar specialization in the museum field. Michael's insightful and detailed remarks regarding very many of the Longridge delftware objects are interwoven throughout that volume. Margaret Macfarlane recently retired from her position as Keeper of Decorative Arts at England's Hampshire County Museum Service, for whom she acquired and researched an incredible number of rare delftware objects. Because Margaret has long been regarded as the world's foremost specialist on English delft teawares, she was asked to be responsible for the written material relating to that portion of the Longridge collection. The sections on delft books and the boot and shoes also are results of her meticulous research. Jonathan Home of London is known worldwide as one of the preeminent dealers in English earthenware and stoneware and also is a respected author and supporter of publi- cations on those subjects. In addition to writing the Preface for these volumes, Jonathan worked literally side by side with the author, reviewing the entire delftware text and adding invaluable remarks drawn from his own research and experience. His input regard- ing the "nuts and bolts" of publishing a work such as this was essential to its coming to fruition. The Longridge Collection 13
Copyright Jonathan Horn Publications 2000.| For information on re-use see: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/Copyright




