Skip to main content
A teapot with a stand from a twenty-one-piece tea service characterized by a tree and its base …
Teapot with Stand
A teapot with a stand from a twenty-one-piece tea service characterized by a tree and its base …
A teapot with a stand from a twenty-one-piece tea service characterized by a tree and its base leaves in underglaze blue outlined in gold with orange berries.
Teapot with Stand, New Hall Porcelain Factory, c. 1795-1810, hard-paste porcelain, Telfair Museum of Art, Savannah, Georgia.

Teapot with Stand

Maker (British, 1781 - 1835)
Datec. 1795 - 1810
MediumHard-paste porcelain
DimensionsLid: 2 1/2 × 4 7/16 × 3 3/16 inches (6.4 × 11.3 × 8.1 cm)
Teapot: Handle to Spout: 6 × 10 1/2 inches (15.2 × 26.7 cm)
Plate: 3/4 × 6 1/2 × 5 1/2 inches (1.9 × 16.5 × 14 cm)
MarkingsStamped on the bottom of teapot in purple: 446 / . / [check mark] Stamped on the bottom of stand in red: 446 / . / [check mark]
Credit LineGift of Robert E. Jones.
Object number1983.8.1.a-.c
On View
Not on view
CopyrightThe images and text contained on this page are owned by Telfair Museums or used by the Museum with permission from the owners. Unauthorized reproduction, transmission or display of these materials is prohibited with the exception of items deemed “fair use” as defined by U.S. and international copyright laws.Label TextThis tea service represents the mixture of sources of material and design inspiration that occurred at British goods manufacturers in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Until the 1740s, British potteries struggled to replicate the mixture of kaolin clay and china rock (petuntse) required to produce high-fired porcelain like that of China. The New Hall Porcelain Factory first opened in 1781 and was dedicated to manufacturing hard-paste porcelain. The painted and gilt berries and vine-like trees in dark blues and reds that adorn the surfaces of this tea service mimic porcelain made and exported from Arita, Japan beginning in the 17th century. Although the sources of material and ornament are Asian, the shapes of these objects, such as their high, curving handles, were derived from ancient Greek earthenware vessels and reflect the enthusiasm for ancient material culture in Europe during this period.
Tea Service
New Hall Porcelain Factory
c. 1795 - 1810
A sugar bowl from a twenty-one-piece tea service characterized by a tree and its base leaves in…
New Hall Porcelain Factory
c. 1795 - 1810
One of eight sets of teacups and saucers from a twenty-one-piece tea service characterized by a…
New Hall Porcelain Factory
c. 1795 - 1810
A cream pitcher from a twenty-one-piece tea service characterized by a tree and its base leaves…
New Hall Porcelain Factory
c. 1795 - 1810
A waste bowl from a twenty-one-piece tea service characterized by a tree and its base leaves in…
New Hall Porcelain Factory
c. 1795 - 1810
A saucer from a twenty-one-piece tea service characterized by a tree and its base leaves in und…
New Hall Porcelain Factory
c. 1795 - 1810
A green porcelain teapot with a gold framed portrait of Josephine Bonaparte on the body, gold z…
Sevres Porcelain
c. 1844
Rockingham Works
1831 - 1842
The second plate features a blue rim with three clusters of white flowers and green leaves alte…
Fischer & Mieg
c. 1890
Lowestoft Porcelain Factory
c. 1790 - 1800
The twelfth plate features a blue rim with three clusters of pink flowers with long green leave…
Fischer & Mieg
c. 1890
A green porcelain coffeepot with a gold framed portrait of Napoleon I on the body, gold zoomorp…
Sevres Porcelain
c. 1844