SFO Opens New Exhibit

July 28, 2016

Blue-and-white transferware reached its peak in production and popularity in the first half of the nineteenth century.  Staffordshire potters in central England first developed a successful method for transferring designs onto wares using hand-engraved copperplates as early as the mid-eighteenth century.  Designs on wares often featured exotic, distant lands such as India, the Middle East, and China.  A number of superbly illustrated books made by European travelers and artists in the early nineteenth century helped fuel the British public’s fascination with foreign locales.

In an era before photography, over-sized tomes, such as Thomas and William Daniell’s Oriental Scenery (1795–1807), depicted the stunning landscapes and historic architecture of India.  Such volumes featured outstanding examples of aquatints, produced using a printmaking technique that created tonal gradations resembling ink or watercolor washes.  Because effective copyright law did not exist in England before 1842, potters began using images from these scenic publications on ceramics as early as 1810.  Makers rarely copied scenes faithfully; instead, they freely adapted imagery—adding, removing, and even reversing sections of prints.

This exhibition features blue-and-white wares made by Spode and a number of other British potters.  Scenes featured on wares range from famous architectural views of India, such as the Taj Mahal, drawn from A Picturesque Tour along the Rivers Ganges and Jumna in India (1824) to scenes of Turkey and China taken from Views in the Ottoman Empire (1803) and A Picturesque Voyage to India by the Way of China (1810).  The corresponding prints accompany the ceramic wares.

This exhibition was made possible by a generous loan from Michael Sack.

From Print to Plate: Views of the East on Transferware is located pre-security in the International Terminal Main Hall Departures Lobby, San Francisco International Airport.  This exhibition is on view to all airport visitors from July 30, to March 19.