Mug
Dateca. 1820
MediumStoneware, salt-glazed, gray with blue and Albany slip interior
DimensionsHt. 7 1/16"; Diam. at foot: 3 7/8"; Diam. at lip: 3 3/8".
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1999.900.2
DescriptionGray salt-glazed stoneware mug of cylindrical form with flat base and gently sloping shoulder tapering to plain circulr rim. Simple C-scroll handle with elongated oval juncture at lower terminal. Small circular hold on top of handle near upper juncture (probably intended as a fixture point for a pewter thumb piece and lid). Interior of mug coated with an orange-brown Albany slip. Exterior of mug decorated in cobalt blue with a narrow band at the base and on the shoulder at the upper handle juncture. Opposite the handle, covering approximately one-third of the circumference of the mug, a checkerboard pattern in cobalt blue extends from band to band. The checkerboard pattern terminates on either side with a curving vertical line.Label TextThis mug is evidence of just how influential long-standing German traditions were on American potters. Made in New York State, this piece is decorated like many eighteenth-century German mugs and jugs. The shaping of the rim and the hole punched in the top of the handle suggest this mug was intended to be fitted with a metal lid similar to that on the Wingender jug. This German custom was not used on English or most American stoneware.
Exhibition(s)
ca. 1881
1792-1800
ca. 1876
1800-1815
ca. 1920
1816-1817
ca. 1820
1761-1762
ca. 1823
1866-1890
ca. 1690
1728-1729