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The first products of the Minton factory were
blue transfer-printed wares, but in 1798 bone china (porcelain
containing bone ash) was introduced, with considerable success.
Until 1836, when Thomas Minton died and his son Herbert took over
the business, the factory's staple products consisted of useful and
unpretentious tablewares in painted or printed earthenware or bone
china, following the typical shapes and decorative patterns of the
period; figures and ornamental porcelains were made increasingly
from the 1820s.
In the 1820s he started production of bone china;
this early Minton is regarded as comparable to French Sèvres, by
which it was greatly influenced.
Minton's was the only English china factory of
the 19th century to employ a Sèvres process called pâte-sur-pâte (ie:
painted decoration in white clay slip instead of enamel before
glazing).
Minton also produced Parian figures.
The Minton factory was the most popular supply
source in the 19th century of dinnerware made to order for embassies
and for heads of state and the factory is still producing to the
present day as part of the Royal Doulton Group.

love birds from
the Willow pattern
Herbert Minton, one of the outstanding
entrepreneurs of the 19th century, introduced new techniques and
methods of production and established Mintons reputation for both
industrial enterprise and artistic excellence. A. W. N. Pugin, Sir
Henry Cole, and Prince Albert were close associates whose designs
were used by Minton. The painter and sculptor Alfred Stevens, the
French sculptors Hugues Protât and Émile Jeannest, and the painter
John Simpson were also employed there.
In 1845, Herbert Minton took Michael Daintry
Hollins into partnership, and the tile-making side of the business
became known as Minton Hollins & Co. Herbert Minton's successful
experiments in making encaustic tiles during the 1840s had set him
at the forefront of a huge industry supplying the needs of
institutions, churches, and domestic interiors all over the world.
Later, he was a leader in exploiting industrial techniques for
producing printed and painted tiles, and for the rest of the century
the firm produced tiles in a vast array of styles, many of them
designed by leading artists such as Christopher Dresser, Walter
Crane, John Moyr Smith, and William Wise. Relief-moulded tiles were
introduced to the Minton range from the 1860s.

The Minton-Hollins tile factory
A grade II listed building - only the
frontage is left which
is used as offices for a telecommunications company.
Minton produced some of the finest examples of
Parian ware, a marble-like unglazed porcelain body developed during
the 1840s and used most successfully for sculptural pieces. John
Bell, the American Hiram Powers, and Albert Carrier de Belleuse were
among the sculptors who produced statuary for Minton; scaled-down
models of larger pieces by contemporary and past sculptors were also
produced in Parian, and sometimes the material was used in
combination with glazed and painted bone china for display pieces.
The French ceramist Léon Arnoux became art
director at Minton in 1849 and remained there until 1892. Among his
achievements were the development of Renaissance-inspired ceramics
such as inlaid earthenwares, pieces painted in the style of Limoges
porcelain, and the richly colourful majolica, first shown at the
Great Exhibition of 1851 and used for all kinds of objects from
large garden ornaments and elaborate display pieces to dishes and
jugs for the table. Arnoux attracted other French artists to Minton,
notably the sculptor Carrier de Belleuse, the modeller and decorator
Marc-Louis Solon, and the painter Antoine Boullemier.
Marc-Louis Solon introduced the pâte-sur-pâte
technique to Minton, having developed it previously at Sèvres. This
laborious process involves building up a design in relief with
layers of liquid slip, each one having to dry before the next is
applied. Using this technique, Solon and his apprentices modelled
diaphanously clad maidens and tumbling cherubs on vases and plaques
with a skill that was unmatched at any other factory.
After Herbert Minton's death in 1858, the firm
was run by his nephew Colin Minton Campbell, a similarly dynamic and
innovative director. Oriental decoration preoccupied Minton from the
1860s onward. Highly original pieces, both in earthenware and bone
china, evoked Chinese cloisonné enamels, Japanese lacquer and
ivories, Islamic metalwork and Turkish pottery. In 1870, Minton's
Art Pottery Studio was established in Kensington, London, under the
direction of the painter W. S. Coleman, in order to encourage both
amateur and professional artists to decorate china and tiles for
Minton; although popular and influential, the studio was not rebuilt
when it burnt down in 1875.
Minton's output of distinguished ornamental wares
continued unabated to the end of the 19th century and beyond. From
1902, a range of slip-trailed majolica wares represented Minton's
contribution to Art Nouveau. Minton's ability to pursue these often
expensive technical and artistic challenges is a tribute to the
success of the tablewares which have been the firm's financial
backbone throughout its history.
Minton
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