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baptized
July 12, 1730, Burslem [now in Stoke-on-Trent], Staffordshire, Eng.
--d. Jan. 3, 1795, Etruria, Staffordshire),
English pottery designer and manufacturer, outstanding in his scientific
approach to pottery making and known for his exhaustive researches into
materials, logical deployment of labour, and sense of business organization.
The youngest child of the potter Thomas Wedgwood, Josiah came from a family
whose members had been potters since the 17th century. After his father's
death in 1739, he worked in the family business at Churchyard Works, Burslem,
becoming exceptionally skillful at the potter's wheel and, in 1744, an
apprentice to his elder brother Thomas. An attack of smallpox seriously
curtailed his work (the disease later affected his right leg, which was
then amputated); the consequent inactivity, however, enabled him to read,
research, and experiment in his craft. After Thomas refused his proposal
for partnership c. 1749, Josiah, after a brief partnership (1752-53) with
John Harrison at Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, joined, in 1754, with
Thomas Whieldon of Fenton Low, Staffordshire, probably the leading potter
of his day. This became a fruitful partnership, enabling Wedgwood to become
a master of current pottery techniques. He then began what he called his
"experiment book," an invaluable source on Staffordshire pottery. After
inventing the improved green glaze still popular today, Wedgwood terminated
his partnership with Whieldon and went into business for himself at Burslem,
first at the Ivy House factory, where he perfected cream-coloured earthenware
that, because of Queen Charlotte's patronage in 1765, was called Queen's
ware. Well finished and clean in appearance with simple decoration, Queen's
ware became, by virtue of its durable material and serviceable forms,
the standard domestic pottery and enjoyed a worldwide market. On one of
his frequent visits to Liverpool, he met the merchant Thomas Bentley in
1762. Because his enterprise had spread from the British Isles to the
Continent, Wedgwood expanded his business to the nearby Brick House (or
Bell Works) factory. In 1768 Bentley became his partner in the manufacture
of ornamental items that were primarily unglazed stonewares in various
colours, formed and decorated in the popular style of Neoclassicism, to
which Josiah lent great impetus. Chief among these wares were black basaltes,
which by the addition of red encaustic painting could be used to imitate
Greek red-figure vases; and jasper, a fine-grained vitreous body resulting
from the high firing of paste containing barium sulphate (cauk). For his
ornamental vases, Wedgwood built a factory called Etruria, to which the
manufacture of useful wares was also transferred c. 1771-73 (there his
descendants carried on the business until 1940, when the factory was relocated
at Barlaston, Staffordshire). The most famous artist he employed at Etruria
was the sculptor John Flaxman, whose wax portraits and other relief figures
he translated into jasperware. Wedgwood's accomplishments were enormous
and diversified. His wares appealed particularly to the rising European
bourgeois class, and porcelain and faience factories suffered severely
from competition with him. Surviving factories switched to the manufacture
of creamware (called on the Continent faience fine or faience anglaise),
and the use of tin enamel abated. Even the great factories at Sèvres,
France, and at Meissen, Ger., found their trade affected. Jasperwares
were imitated in biscuit porcelain at Sèvres, and Meissen produced a glazed
version called Wedgwoodarbeit. Evidence of the popularity of Wedgwood's
creamware is found in the gargantuan service of 952 pieces made in 1774
for Empress Catherine the Great of Russia. Other wares followed jasper's
introduction in 1775--rosso antico (red porcelain), cane, drab, chocolate,
and olive wares--created by adding colouring oxides. Every kind of shape
and function Wedgwood explored. His invention of the pyrometer, a device
for measuring high temperatures (invaluable for gauging oven heats for
firings), earned him commendation as a fellow of the Royal Society. Among
the many brilliant scientists with whom he was friends or collaborated
was Erasmus Darwin, who encouraged him to invest in steam-powered engines;
thus in 1782 Etruria was the first factory to install such an engine.
Wedgwood's daughter Susannah was the mother of Charles Darwin.
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