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The Pegasus Vase

1786/1786

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

The body of the vase is made of pale blue jasper, and the relief decoration, handles and Pegasus are of white jasper. Jasper is a type of unglazed stoneware that can be stained with colour before firing. Josiah Wedgwood I (1730-95) perfected the technique by 1775 after a number of experiments to produce a new clay body for the making of gems.

Wedgwood made a number of examples of the Pegasus Vase in jasper ware and in black basalt. This example that can be firmly dated to the eighteenth century. With the sharp relief decoration set against the smooth surface, the vase is a masterpiece of the potter's art, and Wedgwood took great pride in presenting it to the British Museum in 1786.

The decoration of the vase was modelled for Wedgwood by the artist John Flaxman junior (1755-1826). Flaxman adapted a variety of classical sources; the figures in the main scene are based on an engraving of a Greek vase of the fourth century BC, while the Medusa heads at the base of the handles are taken from an engraving of an antique sandal.

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  • Title: The Pegasus Vase
  • Date Created: 1786/1786
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 18.00in; Diameter: 10.80in (with handles)
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: relief; applied
  • Subject: religious object; mythical figure/creature; myth/legend; classical deity; temple; reptile; serpent
  • Registration number: 1786,0527.1
  • Production place: Factory in Etruria
  • Producer: Designed by Flaxman, John. Modelled by Hackwood, William. Factory of Wedgwood
  • Material: stoneware
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Donated by Wedgwood, Josiah
British Museum

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