Advanced Search

Copy of Portland Vase

Copy of Portland Vase

Manufacturer: Wedgwood (English)
Date: about 1790
Dimensions:
10 1/16 in. (25.6 cm)
Medium: earthenware, jasper
Place of Origin: England
Classification: Ceramics
Credit Line: Gift of Alfred B. Koch
Object number: 1923.3101
Label Text:While glassmakers have often sought to imitate ceramic, such as with Mieke Groot’s Vase, this ambitious model of the ancient Portland Vase by Josiah Wedgwood (British, 1730–1795) is a rare instance of ceramic copying glass. The celebrated Roman cameo glass vessel was blown of two fused glass layers of contrasting color, the outermost, white layer than carved down to create the mythological scene. Cameo glass was the most luxurious glass of the late Augustan era (early 1st cent. B.C.).

In 1783, Margaret Bentinck, second duchess of Portland, bought the Roman piece from the Barberini family in Rome; it has since been known as the Portland Vase. The sensation that the acquisition caused probably prompted Wedgwood to create his jasper ware copy around 1789, and his workshop continued to produce the vases for decades. The famous Roman glass original is owned by The British Museum.
DescriptionWhite figures on black jasper background.
On view
In Collection(s)