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A Book of Porcelain: Fine examples in the Victoria & Albert Museum cover

A Book of Porcelain: Fine examples in the Victoria & Albert Museum

Chapter 2: PREFACE
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About This Book

The volume pairs twenty-eight colour water‑colour reproductions of porcelain specimens in the Victoria and Albert Museum with concise descriptive text that highlights each object's form, decoration, technique, and provenance. Arranged by regional sections—Chinese, Japanese, Italian, French, German, and English—the commentary uses individual pieces to illustrate broader developments in materials, glazing, ornamentation, and the adoption of foreign motifs, including examples with later metal mounts. The writer explicitly avoids a complete history and instead emphasizes what makes each example noteworthy, using the coloured plates as visual documentation to support the observations.

The twenty-eight water-colour drawings reproduced in this volume have been made from specimens of porcelain in the collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington, many of which have never been published before, while others have not hitherto been reproduced in colours. The selection has been made not merely of those pieces in their several classes which have a high sale-room value; due consideration has been given to those which by their aesthetic qualities appealed to the sympathies of the artist, while at the same time an effort has been made to include objects having some particular historical or personal interest, or important as documents in the history of ceramics. In this connection it should be explained that the drawings were made before Mr. George Salting’s unrivalled collection of Oriental porcelain passed by his death into the hands of the nation.

The text does not pretend to be a general treatise on porcelain, or even an exhaustive summary of its history. The aim of the writer has been to record everything that is noteworthy with regard to the several pieces represented in the drawings, and at the same time to lay stress on the particular aspects of the subject which these examples serve to elucidate, taking them as the theme for a discussion of various phases in the evolution of the art.

Anything in the nature of a bibliography of works consulted by the author would be out of place in a publication of this kind, but acknowledgment must be made of his indebtedness, in the sphere of Oriental ceramics, to the writings of Dr. Bushell, Captain Brinkley, Dr. Otto Kümmel (in Geschichte des Kunstgewerbes), and Mr. R. L. Hobson. For English porcelain reference has been made, in addition to older authorities, to the works of Mr. William Burton; while the chief authorities consulted on the subject of Continental factories are Dr. Brinckmann, Dr. Berling, Dr. Bertold Pfeiffer, Signor Corona, M. le Baron Davillier, M. le Comte X. de Chavagnac, and M. Lechevallier-Chevignard. The author desires to express his gratefulness for various information and personal assistance afforded him by Mr. M. Yeats Brown, Mr. H. P. Mitchell, M. le Comte X. de Chavagnac, M. Émile Auscher, and the Friherrinna Julia Marks von Würtemberg. Thanks are also due to Mr. J. H. Fitzhenry for kind permission to reproduce a Ludwigsburg coffee-pot in his collection.

BERNARD RACKHAM.

London, October 1910.