Storage Jar
Date1870-1879
Maker
Chester Webster (1799 - 1882)
MediumSalt-glazed stoneware
DimensionsOverall: 8 1/4in. (21cm)
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number2008.900.1
DescriptionStraight-sided, one-half gallon, salt-glazed stoneware storage jar with a slight narrowing at the neck and an everted and flared rim, decorated with incised decoration including a poinsettia flower flanked by a bird on one side and a fish on the other, above these designs is one band of geometric-triangles and a second band of geometric-diamonds. Three groups of scored-banding complete the decoration.Label TextChester Webster was born in Hartford, Connecticut and moved to North Carolina with his family about 1818 when he was nineteen years old. This jar is decorated with incised lines, which form detailed designs including a bird, fish, and poinsettia flower. Chester Webster used incised lines as his primary method of decoration. This style links his wares both to earlier nineteenth-century vessels made by his ancestors who worked in Connecticut and to English eighteenth-century stoneware traditions.
ProvenanceFormerly in the Collection of the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Exhibition(s)
ca. 1860
1835 - 1845
ca. 1790
1865-1885
ca. 1770
1817-1837
ca. 1810
1849 (dated)
ca. 1881
ca. 1800
1821-1822