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Looking for Martins Brothers Pottery? We have almost everything on eBay. 75 of the Top 100 Retailers can be found on eBay. Find Martins Brothers Pottery from the Top Retailers. The four Martin Brothers were pottery manufacturers in London from 1873 to 1914. In their own day their Martinware was described as art pottery, and they were one of the earliest potteries making this, but in modern terms they fit better into the studio pottery category, which was invented later.

Martin Brothers pottery flies into Toronto Antiques Trade Gazette

The Martin Brothers pottery was founded by the eldest of a group of brothers, Robert Wallace Martin (1843 to 1923). Robert Martin trained in sculpture at Lambeth School of Art and later at the Royal Academy of Art. He set up the first Martin Brothers pottery in the 1860s, where he made terracotta sculpture. The four Martin brothers, Wallace, Walter, Edwin and Charles, were pioneers in the production of studio pottery. They became famous for their eccentric, grotesquely modeled 'Wally Birds', wheel-thrown and sculpted face jugs, vases and other items reminiscent of art and architecture of the Middle Ages. The modern market for Martin Brothers pottery has been defined by key exhibitions and the sales of important collections. Here is ATG's pick of five events since 1978. The Martin Brothers were four brothers who set up a pottery manufacturing business in London. Working from the 1873 to 1915, they were famous for exuberant and lively work that was often referred to as the origin of 'art pottery', or studio pottery as we know it today.

A good early 20th Century Martinware stoneware "Grotesque" bird, the detachable head modelled

£2900 Martin Brothers Loving Cup Gift Voucher Martin Brothers Bird £19000 Martin Brothers Face Jug Martin Brothers Vase Martin Brothers Bird Martin Brothers Spoonwarmer £18500 Martin Brothers Figural Sculpture Martin Bothers Aquatic Vase Martin Brothers Gourd Martin Brothers Spoonwarmer Martin Brothers Spoonwarmer Martin Brothers Vase The four Martin Brothers were pottery manufacturers in London from 1873 to 1914. In their own day their Martinware was described as art pottery, and they were one of the earliest potteries making this, but in modern terms they fit better into the studio pottery category, which was invented later. This biography is from Wikipedia under an. The sons of a wholesale stationers' clerk, the four Martin Brothers, Robert Wallace, Walter, Edwin and Charles are amongst the most important names in British art pottery, creating some of the weirdest and most wonderful studio pottery pieces of the late Victorian and early 20th century. Martin Brothers is one of the most significant names in the history of British pottery. Four brothers, working in London, conjured up idiosyncratic, whimsical creations that would represent the peak of Victorian art pottery and the beginning of 20th century Studio Pottery.

Guide to Buying Martin Brothers

The Martin Brothers Pottery was England's first late 19th-century pottery producing art wares and its work the most eccentric. It was founded in 1873 by Robert Wallace Martin, a stone-carver. The Martin Brothers - Robert Wallace, Charles, Edwin and Walter - were four brothers and pottery manufacturers in London that produced distinctive stoneware pottery from the 1870s and sporadically through to 1923. The brothers were best known for their bird and unusual face sculptures, bowls, and vessels decorated with sea creatures. Details A MARTIN BROTHERS STONEWARE 'WALLY-BIRD' JAR AND COVER 1891 Modelled standing, glazed in tones of blue, green and brown, on an ebonised wood base, the cover and the back of the base incised 'R.W. Martin & Bros./ London & Southall, 7-1891' 11 ¾ in. (29.8 cm.) high Provenance The four Martin Brothers were pottery manufacturers in London from 1873 to 1914. In their own day their Martinware was described as art pottery, and they were one of the earliest potteries making this, but in modern terms they fit better into the studio pottery category, which was invented later.

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The four Martin brothers were pioneers in the production of Victorian studio pottery. Renowned for their eccentric and fantastical designs, the brothers worked during the Gothic Revival and the Arts and Crafts movement - major 19th Century reactions to the Industrial Revolution. The four Martin brothers—Robert Wallace, Charles, Walter, and Edwin—were studio potters who represented the transition from decorative Victorian ceramics to 20th century studio pottery in England. Robert Wallace Martin (1843-1923) trained as a sculptor. He attended the Lambeth School of Art, where he studied drawing, and the Royal Academy of Art.