The appeal of Mason's "Table and Flower Pot" pattern lies in its still life of oriental ob...
The appeal of Mason's "Table and Flower Pot" pattern lies in its still life of oriental objects and in the diverse range of colors employed to depict it. Masons seems to have gone after every color in the paint box. Taupe transfer printing provides the guidelines for enamel decoration in green, orange, yellow, pink, peach and slate blue.
Objects originally depicted in the Asian patterns that inspired Mason's designers carried symbolic meanings that had been lost long before reaching the Midland potteries. The resulting still life is intriguing, if more than a little baffling. A baton or scroll case seems to float behind a prominent vase of peonies. The free-form table seems to have been constructed from a gnarled tree root. We recognize the bowl of fruit, but is the nearby duck a figurine or, more bizarre, a live duck in attendance? We are brought back to normalcy by the attractive border of blossoms among scalloped patches of fretwork patterns which decorates the flange of these small dessert size plates.
Mystery,in any case, does not seem to have dampened enthusiasm for one of Mason's best known patterns.