Charlotte Wilcoxen
Journey of Discovery: A Retrospective
During the winter of 1970/71 in Albany, New York, the 1624 Dutch fortress,
Fort Orange, was partially excavated under the direction of New York state
archaeologist Paul R. Huey. The excavation was a salvage project; installation
of pylons for a new bridge over the Hudson was planned for the spring of
1971.
Families of Indian traders had lived in the fort, and hundreds of tin-glazed
earthenware sherds from their households were recovered. As a collector
of Dutch delft, I examined these artifacts and noticed that, in addition
to delft sherds whose surfaces were entirely covered by a tin glaze, there
were also fragments with a tin glaze only on the obverse side and a transparent
lead glaze over a clay slip on the reverse. Paul Huey had noticed this earlier,
forewarned to watch for their occurrence by Ivor Noël Hume, the former
director of the Department of Archaeology of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
in Virginia.
I had read about majolica from Antwerp that was entirely tin glazed and
of museum quality. These Fort Orange sherds, however, were cruder in design
and potting. We needed more information for identification, but found the
printed word a language barrier; so I volunteered to travel to the Netherlands
and consult Dutch experts.
In Amsterdam, the Dutch ceramics department at the Rijksmuseum was closed
for renovations and its director was on leave. Therefore, I went first to
the Boymansvan Beuningen Museum in Rotterdam. The curator who met
me instantly understood my quandary. She explained that the Fort Orange
sherds which were tin glazed on only one side are Dutch majolica (j
pronounced as y), an earthenware forerunner of delft introduced
into the Netherlands around 1550 by the first or second generation Italian
potters of Antwerp. Cost-conscious Dutch potters immediately began to copy
the majolica, but because tin was rare and expensive, they limited the tin
glaze to the front surface. About 1600, Chinese porcelain was imported into
Holland and became extremely popular. Dutch potters also copied porcelain
forms and decoration, and by about 1660 majolica ceased to be made, except
in Friesland. The two earthenware forms are now considered distinct from
each other; the majolica has an Italian design tradition (except for one
stylized Chinese Wan-li pattern) whereas the delft follows the blue-and-white
Chinese decorative style.
The museums curator and I next proceeded to a large room with tiers
of wide, shallow drawers holding sherds. Pointing out the drawers with early-seventeenth-century
majolica, she left me alone to study themperched on a ladder six feet
above the floor. Unlike the plow-zone sherds commonly found in North America,
these fragments, retrieved from such locations as canal beds or construction
sites, were roughly five or six inches square with colorful decorations.
The most poignant, however, were those recovered from earth churned up by
Germanys terrible World War II bombings of Rotterdam. The sherds exactly
duplicated the patterns of those from Fort Orange.
Before returning to the United States, I visited four other museums and
talked with the city archaeologist of Amsterdam and with a prominent majolica
collector. From my research, I gained priceless insights about Dutch ceramics.
This information was particularly valuable in explaining this delft dichotomy
to American archaeologists who, in turn, would determine ethnic influences
and chronology.
Since my trip, a number of books and articles on Dutch majolica have been
published. Some have English texts or, if Dutch, English summaries. And
at least one is bilingual throughout.
Charlotte Wilcoxen
Author of Dutch Trade and Ceramics in America in the Seventeenth Century,
published in 1987 by the Albany Institute of History & Art (Albany,
New York), Charlotte Wilcoxen continues to be actively involved in ceramic
research at the age of ninety-five.
Select annotated bibliography
Huey, Paul R. Aspects of Continuity and Change in Colonial Dutch Material
Culture at Fort Orange, 16241664. Ph.D. diss., University of
Michigan, 1988.
Korf, Dingeman. Nederlandse majolica. Haarlem: DeHaan, 1981. In Dutch.
This book has several hundred illustrations, and with the aid of a Dutch
dictionary, the captions are easy to read.
Scholten, Frits. The Edwin van Drecht Collection of Dutch Majolica and
Delftware. Amsterdam: E. van Drecht, 1993. Bilingual, Dutch and English.
A fine and unusual book, this reference has scores of color illustrations
and short captions.
Van Dam, J. D. Geleyersgoet en Hollants porceleyn: Ontwikkelingen
in de Nederlandse aardewerk-industrie, 15601660. Medelingenblad,
Nederlandse, vereniging van vriended van de ceramiek 108 (1982): 1388.
In Dutch with an English summary. Occupying the entire issue of this serial
publication, this article includes scores of illustrations covering both
delft (faïence) and majolica plates.
Wilcoxen, Charlotte. Dutch Majolica of the Seventeenth Century. American Ceramic Circle Bulletin, no. 3 (1982): 1728.
. Dutch Trade and Ceramics in America in the Seventeenth
Century. Albany: Lane Press of Albany, 1987.
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