We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Perceptions of Scottish pottery: nineteenth-century collecting in National Museums Scotland.
- Authors
Hynes, Adrienne
- Abstract
The manufacture of domestic pottery in Scotland was an important industry producing vast quantities of wares for both the home and export markets. The industry reached its height in the nineteenth century, the era that saw the inception of international exhibitions and the establishment of industrial museums. Over recent decades Scottish pottery has been collected by both museums and individual collectors and research in the field of material culture has uncovered the history of this significant industry. This paper will examine nineteenth-century attitudes to contemporary collecting of Scottish pottery, focusing on two of the institutions which eventually came to be absorbed into National Museums Scotland – the Industrial Museum of Scotland and its successor the Edinburgh Museum of Science and Art. Looking at the relationship between pottery manufacturers and these institutions will show how nineteenth-century perceptions of Scottish pottery were influenced by ideas of identity, art and education.
- Subjects
SCOTTISH pottery; POTTERY collecting; POTTERY industry; INDUSTRIAL museums; MATERIAL culture
- Publication
Journal of the History of Collections, 2018, Vol 30, Issue 2, p269
- ISSN
0954-6650
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/jhc/fhx023