Creativi-tea
- Black Tea Canister
Consuming tea, hot chocolate and coffee was a popular pastime in the 18th century. New types of objects were developed for these exotic drinks in response to the wishes of potential buyers.
Black Delftware items were generally of a smaller size, but this small teapot[fig.30], made around 1700, is tiny: only 7.5 cm in height. In terms of sizing, a compelling link can be made to early teapots from China, like these three examples [fig.31]. Tiny teapots were used to brew tea and used during tea tasting sessions. The holding capacity allowed concentrated brews of a particular type. These, in turn, could be diluted using hot water to create the perfect cup of tea. The sizing also reflects the value of the tea, because tea was consumed sparingly.
Fig. 26: De Metaale Pot, teapot and cover, Delft, c.1700-1724, tin-glazed earthenware with black ground and polychrome decoration, 14 x 18.1 cm (h,l), Victoria and Albert Museum, inv.nr. 128A-1887, https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O118495/teapot-and-cover-eenhoorn- lambertus-van/
Fig. 27: De Metaale Pot, coffee pot, Delft, c.1710–1730, earthenware, lead glaze (quartz), enamel paints, large and small firing technique, polychrome (blue, red, green and yellow) on black ground, 20 × 17 × 11 cm (h,w,d), Courtesy: Museum Prinsenhof, Delft, inv.nr. N/A.
Fig. 28: Factory unknown, black Delftware rectangular tea canister and cover, Delft, c.1695-1720, 8.6 cm (h), courtesy: Aronson Antiquairs, D9023, https://www.aronson.com/object/d9023-black- delftware-rectangular-tea-canister-and-cover/
Fig. 29: Presumably De Metaale Pot, black Delftware fluted rectangular tea canister and cover, Delft, c.1720, 10.5 cm (h), courtesy: Aronson Antiquairs, D1436, https://www.aronson.com/object/d1436-black-delftware-fluted-rectangular-tea-canister- and-cover
Fig. 30: Factory unknown, Black Delftware teapot and cover, Delft, c.1700, 7,5 cm (h). courtesy: Aronson Antiquairs, D1046, https://www.aronson.com/object/d1046-black-delftware-teapot- and-cover/
Fig. 31: Anonymous, Small covered winepot or teapots, Chinese, 1662–1722, Qing Dynasty, Kangxi period porcelain painted in underglaze blue, 8.7 cm to 8.8 cm (h) Robert Lehman Collection, 1975, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, inv.nr. 1975.1.1712, https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/460667