Whitefriars
Glass
<<
Back to Whitefriars Glass Home Page
Please click here to view all Whitefriars Glass
we currently have in stock
by
David
M. Issitt ~ Leading Expert and Published Writer
on Glass and Glass-related Matters.
When
you think of the big, historic names in British glass, companies
like Stevens & Williams and Thomas Webb &
Sons or even Richardsons or John Walsh
more than likely spring to the mind first. Yet, none of these
wins the award for being the longest active British glasshouse
- that honour goes to Whitefriars Glassworks, a company
that continued to make and market highly creative, successful
lines of glass for more than 250 years. Today, eager Whitefriars
glass collectors have a multitude of different styles and
historic lines of glass to hunt for and choose from.
As
a very old craft, glassblowing is rich in historic associations.
The Whitefriars Glassworks dates back to 1680 fourteen years
after the Great Fire of London when one William Davies
founded it near the Temple in the City of London, on a site
between Fleet Street and the Thames, now devoted to newspaper
production. There had originally stood the Monastery of the
Carmelite Fathers, who were known as the "White Friars".
In choosing this site the founder was no doubt influenced
by ready access to the wharves from which to draw Newcastle
coal, sand, clay and the other materials required for his
trade. Although the religious house was surrendered in I538,
the precincts had remained a sanctuary, nominally for debtors
but in practice for criminals of all kinds, and as a result
all available space was crowded with people living in squalor.
Understandably, until the privilege of sanctuary was abolished
in 1697 and for some time afterwards the area was one of ill
repute.
Evidently
the glassblowers themselves were a virile and hardened community.
There is a story of the visit of an Excise Officer, to collect
duty, which in those days was levied on the weight of glass
produced. He is said to have been resisted "by the brandishing
of blow-irons headed with red-hot glass". A similar incident
occurred, according to the Whitehall Evening Post in 1732,
when the glasshouse was visited by a naval press gang: "Yesterday
a Press Gang went into the glasshouse to press some of the
men at work there, but they were no sooner got in but the
(molten) metal was flung about 'em, and happy was he that
could get out first, and in hurrying out they ran over their
officer, who almost scalded to death". There is
a reference to the district, which was known as "Alsatia",
in Scott's fortunes of Nigel. Glassblowing at Whitefriars
is also mentioned in Pepys famous Diary. In those early days
good quality tableware in flint glass, for which England became
renowned, was made mainly in the vicinity of the notorious
Alsatia”. Emphasis on decanters in an advertisement
appearing in the Tatler of 17I0 reflects the demand for a
transparent vessel for wine at table, following the introduction
of port, which had gained great popularity by the opening
of the eighteenth century. They had been linked with high
artistic standards. In an industry dependent on individual
skill, it is natural that design and craftsmanship should
merge the one with the other. The career of Joseph Leicester
provides a good illustration of the outstanding achievement
that can come from such a marriage. Leicester started work
at Whitefriars at the age of nine. He became a superb craftsman
and an inspiring teacher. He made some pieces to his own design,
so excellent ill conception and execution, that they are to
be found in various museums. He abandoned glassmaking only
when elected to the House of Commons in 1883, as one of the
first of the working class radical M.P's.

In
the quest for beauty at Whitefriars the tendency was to look
more to line and form than to rely on cutting for decorative
effect. In this direction, modern taste and fashion offered
great scope, of which the most was made. With beauty of form
has been blended beauty of colour; in this Whitefriars excelled.
Admirers have referred to "clear jewel-like blues and
greens, amber and amethyst". Beauty is derived too from
variations in the thickness of glass, to invite the subtle
effects of the play of light.
Though
the company opened in the early 1700s, its most renown and
prolific era of production began in the 19th Century, when
prominent society member and successful businessman James
Powell left the wine industry to become the
new owner of Whitefriars Glassworks in 1834. James Powell
was a successful wine merchant, a member of the affluent elite
of nineteenth century London, when he bought the Whitefriars
Glassworks in 1834. He and his family were well acquainted
with the fashions and fads in design, which pleased their
friends and their customers. The output from Whitefriars Glassworks
mirrored closely those design trends, far more so than other
British glassworks. Powell pulled popular glass design ideas
from personal observation of what was hot in glass trends
among his own family members and wealthy friends. He realised
that distinctive, high-quality hand-blown art glass was the
way to proceed in the production of glass. Throughout the
company's history, from those early days, high-quality hand
blown glass would make up the majority of its product line.

Harry
Powell was James Powell's grandson who trained as a chemist
at Oxford University and then joined the company and became
manager of the Glassworks in 1875. He kept very detailed notebooks,
which are now carefully preserved in British museums, and
he also began a very early archive of photographs of the glassworks
and of its products. Whitefriars Glassworks during the nineteenth
century and the early part of the twentieth century made very
high quality art glass on a par with the output of Loetz in
Europe and Tiffany in the USA. They exhibited at the major
international exhibitions and won many prizes during that
period.
They
made fine quality historical stained glass, they were part
of the avant garde of the Arts and Crafts movement, they made
beautiful art nouveau pieces, and when Venetian glass
was "all the rage" in London, James Powell and Sons
were producing some of the finest reproduction Venetian glass
in the world. All of this is well documented, and will no
doubt be increasingly recognised now that the company's archives
are safely stored in the Museum of London, supplemented by
archives held in several other major museums including the
Corning Museum of Glass, the British Museum and the Victoria
and Albert Museum.

In
spite of this long tradition of very fine art glass, the Whitefriars
Glassworks is currently best known for its "Industrial
Art" glass, made from the 1920's onwards after Harry
Powell had retired. The glassworks moved to a new site in
Wealdstone, Middlesex in 1923, and the designs became much
simpler and easier to produce. For most of the Victorian era
and the early part of the 20th Century, Whitefriars' award-winning
glass appeared on mantles beside the best offerings of Tiffany,
Steuben and Loetz. Whitefriars Glassworks was known for its
distinctive, cutting-edge designs and rich colours that lit
up the Art Nouveau and Art Deco eras, such as its soft, flowing
iridescent handkerchief vases and fabulous reproduction Venetian
art glass, which now much sort after by collectors. Whitefriars
Glassworks has three claims to fame.
-
First,
it was England's longest producing glassworks, surviving
for at least 260 years until it closed in 1980.
-
Second,
it made hand blown glass almost exclusively; it was never
a pressed glass works.
-
Thirdly,
it is probably the world’s best-documented glass
works.
In
1919 James Powell and Sons became a limited company and changed
its name to James Powell and Sons (Whitefriars)
Ltd. The main change in the last century was
the move to Wealdstone in 1923 and the consequent increase
in the capacity and output. There was a Whitefriars tradition,
which their glasshouse furnaces are never allowed to die out.
Even an individual furnace remains burning continuously throughout
its "life" of eight to ten years. So when the move
took place, a brazier from the old glasshouse was carried
to the new, and used to ignite the first furnace at Wealdstone.
Thus, it was said that the furnaces of Whitefriars were alight
continuously since the foundation of the glasshouse, a period
of more than 270 years. One of the last pieces to be made
at the old works was the goblet from which the Lord Mayor
of London drinks the Royal Toast. This is still in use at
the Mansion House.
During
the 1930s, Swedish glass had won considerable acclaim in Britain.
From this date onwards, for a period of over thirty years,
the influence of Swedish glass in particular and Scandinavian
glass in general, was clearly discernible in many of
the new designs created at Whitefriars. It was first apparent
in the work of Barnaby Powell, particularly his optic
ribbed designs of the early 1930s, and continued via the thick-walled
organic vessels of James Hogan and Tom Hill designed
during the late 1930s and early 40s. Heavy glass vases and
bowls with regular patterns of bubbles were designed by William
Wilson and made in the mid-1940's and early 1950's. As
the years passed, there was an increasingly close natural
alliance between Whitefriars and their Scandinavian counterparts.
In these countries, glass design was approached freely and
creatively, and glass as a medium was recognised as an important
art form. Characteristics of the Scandinavian Modern style,
which can be discerned in the work of Whitefriars, include
free blown plastic forms, organic shapes, clean fluid outlines,
and the use of cased colours suspended in clear glass. Surface
decoration was kept to a minimum.

New
colours introduced at Whitefriars at this date with a distinctly
Scandinavian flavour include Twilight from 1954, Arctic Blue
and Ocean Green, both from 1959, and Cinnamon, Willow and
Indigo from 1965.
Whitefriars
(or Powell) glass was normally marked with paper labels, which
have often been lost over the years. However, most of the
designs and colours are so distinctive, that it is usually
easy to identify Powell glass post 1930. No other glassworks
was making these designs in these colours.

The
Whitefriars name is now synonymous with its bolder, more futuristic
"Industrial" variety of art glass that
became more prominent from the 20s onward. Vivid, purely Whitefriars
hues like Tangerine, Ruby, Cinnamon, Willow grey, Kingfisher
blue and Indigo glowed from the depths of simple rounded,
angular or often highly textured modern forms. You'll find
thick-walled, classic 60's controlled bubble items like ashtrays,
vases and bowls, plus some really unique chunky items like
chief designer Geoffrey Baxter's
"Textured" series from the 60's and early
70s. The latter items have the look of tree bark frozen in
vivid amber. Another purely Whitefriars find is Baxter's "Drunken
Bricklayer" vase from the 60's, which looks like
a big, stack of three ice cubes stacked haphazardly atop one
another.

William
Wilson, Geoffrey Baxter, and Harry Dyer designed the 'Knobbly'
range, during the 1950's and 1960's. The cased versions were
earlier than the solid coloured vases and lampshades. They
were made in the typical Whitefriars bold colours of green,
ruby, kingfisher, cinnamon, willow (grey) and indigo. "Knobbly"
vases and lamp bases were also made in clear glass with coloured
streaks.
The
Company changed its name to Whitefriars
in 1963. Around the same time the "Knobbly" range
was introduced. William Wilson, Geoffrey Baxter, and Harry
Dyer designed them, during the 1950's and 1960's.
The
mid-1950s to the end of the 1960s was a period of frenetic
design activity at Whitefriars. In order to sustain their
position in the market in an increasingly competitive field,
new designs and colours were required on an annual basis,
so that they could be launched at trade exhibitions such as
the Blackpool and Harrogate Gifts and Fancy Goods Fairs, and
used to secure orders for the following year. Some designs,
produced under pressure, were short-lived and proved to be
technical or commercial failures. Baxter's early designs show
the influence of both the Scandinavian Modern aesthetic, which
he had inherited from William Wilson, and 'Contemporary' design,
a new confidently modern and sometimes slightly quirky style
which had emerged at the time of the Festival of Britain in
1951. Baxter was amongst the first to extend 'Contemporary'
design ideas to the hitherto traditional field of British
glass design, introducing asymmetrical shapes and unusual
stylised and abstract patterns for cutting.

Heavy
glass vases and bowls with regular patterns of bubbles were
designed by William Wilson and made in the mid-1940's and
early 1950's. Whitefriars continued to design and produce
high quality glass right until the end. It has been said that
after the retirement of William Wilson in 1972, they lacked
clear artistic direction.
In
1973 the Whitefriars Company closed its stained glass studio,
and came under increasing financial pressure. Cut glass became
an increasingly high proportion of their total output. This
did not save them. In 1980 they sold only 25,000 pounds sterling's
worth of glass at the annual trade fair in Birmingham, when
in previous years they used to sell about ten times that much.
Their sales were not enough to cover their costs, and in a
sudden and fairly surprising series of moves, the company
was put into receivership, made bankrupt, and closed down
completely by the end of 1980.
Whitefriars
problems began in 1969 when they lost a major contract for
making tubing to their more automated competitor, Corning.
During the 1970's the tower, which had been used for drawing
lengths of thermometer tubing, was used for making millefiori
canes, and the company produced a series of beautiful millefiori
paperweights. These were not the first Whitefriars paperweights.
The company's 1938 catalogue records a series of floral ink-bottles
and paperweights. They were reintroduced in the 1953 catalogue
for a few years, and again reintroduced in 1969. During the
1970's some very special paperweights were made to commemorate
Christmas each year, and other special events. Often the Whitefriars
paperweights included special canes like the signature and
date (1984) canes found in many of their paperweights. Production
of Whitefriars paperweights was taken over by Caithness
Glass (in Scotland) when the Whitefriars glassworks
closed down.
Fixed
costs, particularly fuel and raw materials, had increased
steadily throughout the post-war period, and by the end of
the 1970s, labour costs had risen significantly as well, while
at the same time, productivity had declined as a result of
changes in working practices. All these costs had to be passed
on to the consumer, which meant that, by comparison with other
manufacturers, Whitefriars glass was increasingly expensive,
which made the company particularly vulnerable at times of
recession. Finally, in 1980, Whitefriars failed to secure
enough orders at the annual trade fair at the NEC to see them
through the year, and a decision was taken by the Board to
close the factory down. Although there is reason to suspect
that the developers made an offer for the land the factory
stood on, which was too good to turn down.
Making
fine glassware calls not only for taste in design and first-class
craftsmanship, but also good teamwork. The tradition of working
as a closely integrated team was very strong at Whitefriars.
Harmonious relations between all concerned in the production
processes were, therefore, more important than in many less
exacting industries. It was common for the trade to be handed
down from father to son, or from uncle to nephew. This helped
to foster a family atmosphere. Many families at Whitefriars
can trace their family connections with the firm, through
many generations. Hence, although the plant and equipment
at Wealdstone was modern, both tradition and craftsmanship
ensured that the standards and quality of Whitefriars were
as high at the end as they had been throughout the firm's
long and interesting history.
Identifying
Whitefriars' many glass collectibles is fairly easy today,
this despite the fact that most items were marked simply with
paper labels that often fall off over the years. There are
several good books on Whitefriars Glassworks and its many
products to help you along on your quest, aided by a large
body of Whitefriars' pictorial and written records that are
now housed in the archives of the Corning Museum of Glass,
the London Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Prices
jump from about £25 to £60 for most of the more
common vintage 50's and 60's items on up to several hundred
pounds and more for rare millefiori paperweights and inkwells.
Victorian items typically start from a few hundred pounds
apiece, while a 1916 Ramsden vase has been estimated at as
much as £9,000. The popularity of Powell/Whitefriars
glass in the US has also helped to boost prices in the market
place. A cut glass mosque from the 60s isn't a cheap find
either at around £7,000. In other words, make sure you
do your homework first before you buy. Whatever your budget,
from low end to high, Whitefriars Glassworks has left something
special behind for you.
The
author of this article may be contacted at:
glasswriter@mail.com
If
you wish to read more about glass why not visit the author's
Website at:
www.david-issitt.1Hwy.com
If it is Modern art-glass you wish to know about then visit
my exciting new Website at:
www.glass-glass-glass.1Hwy.com
Where
you will find all the facts about aspiring new art-glass makers
and designers.
© Article and all Images Copyright Protected - 2004 ©
and can not be reproduced without prior permission of
"A Touch of Glass ~ England" and David M. Issitt
[Author]
Please
click here to view all Whitefriars Glass
we currently have in stock
|