English Salt Glazed Teapot Pink Enamel Hand Painted Circa 1760

$2,200.00

This English salt-glazed stoneware teapot, hand-painted with enamel decoration on a rare pink ground, dates to about 1760 and belongs to a small and distinctive group of experimental Staffordshire wares.
It combines a dense, finely finished salt-glazed body with delicate overglaze enamel painting, a technically demanding pairing that was produced in limited numbers.
The form is compact and assured.
The rounded globular body sits firmly on a small foot.
The branch-molded spout and handle introduce movement and a naturalistic quality.
The domed cover completes the composition with balanced proportion.
The pink ground is hand-painted with enamel flowers in green, yellow, and blue.
The palette is soft, and the drawing has a relaxed softness typical of enamel work on salt-glazed stoneware, with a slightly looser line characteristic of enamel decoration on salt glaze.
The colors sit gently on the surface, allowing the form and modeling to remain primary.
Salt-glazed stoneware represents one of the earliest fully developed ceramic industries in England, valued for its hard body and refined finish.
The addition of enamel decoration required a second firing at a lower temperature, increasing both cost and risk in production.
As a result, enamel-decorated examples are significantly less common than undecorated wares.
Teapots of this type are generally associated with Staffordshire and often linked to the Whieldon circle, though precise attribution remains uncertain.
A closely related example is held in the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, confirming the form and decorative approach within a recognized group.
What makes this teapot especially interesting is the combination of its sculptural branch-molded form and its rare pink enamel ground, bringing together two of the most distinctive features of this small group of mid-18th century English salt-glazed wares.
Dimensions: 8.5″ from spout to handle x 5.5″ tall x 5″ diameter
Condition: Excellent with a small restored chip to the underside of the spout tip
Decoration: Overglaze enamel floral decoration on pink ground
Material: Salt-glazed stoneware
Style: Mid-18th century English Chinoiserie
Origin: England
Date: Circa 1760

Out of stock

Notable Details:
Rare combination of salt-glazed stoneware with overglaze enamel decoration
Pink ground with hand-painted floral motifs
Branch-molded spout and handle characteristic of the period
Comparable example in the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
Excellent condition with only minor professional restoration to the spout tip


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