Wedgwood dinnerware has graced the tables of British nobility and Australian families for generations, and now 170 precious ...
Ban This Show, on view at Fort Works Art, does just that. Today the V&A Wedgwood Collection announces that it has acquired 60 contemporary Wedgwood creations in celebration of its 10th anniversary.
Koehn, Nancy F. "Josiah Wedgwood and the First Industrial Revolution TN." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 796-157, April 1996. (Revised January 1998.) ...
Charged with looking after one of the world's most famous collections, curator Catrin Jones talks about her job ahead of ...
Josiah Wedgwood made his "Am I not a Man and a Brother" medallion in 1787 and slavery in the British empire was abolished in an Act of 1833. So this dates from those decades. The pipe's clay may ...
who understood the opportunities presented by the growing consumer market of the industrial revolution - Josiah Wedgwood. He was brought up in a family of potters in north Staffordshire ...
Alongside, Palace has designed a special-edition skateboard in Wedgwood blue, a colour first developed during Josiah Wedgwood’s trials creating his neoclassical ‘Jasperware’ in the 1770s. Each piece ...
NARRATOR:'Josiah Wedgwood was born in 1730. By the age of nine was showing great skill as a potter. His days at the potting wheel came to an end when he lost a leg to a disease called smallpox.' ...
If you visit, the place to start your tour of ‘the Potteries’ must be the World of Wedgwood. You are greeted by a statue of the great Josiah, who made his surname the byword for quality ...
Koehn, N. F. "Josiah Wedgwood and the First Industrial Revolution." In Creating Modern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions, edited by ...