Vase-mania
Jenny Uglow, Rosemary Sweet and Caroline McCaffrey-Howarth join Melvyn Bragg to explore why 18th-century collectors and consumers became so enthusiastic about ancient vases.
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss eighteenth-century 'vase-mania'. In the second half of the century, inspired by archaeological discoveries, the Grand Tour and the founding of the British Museum, parts of the British public developed a huge enthusiasm for vases modelled on the ancient versions recently dug up in Greece. This enthusiasm amounted to a kind of βvase-maniaβ.
Initially acquired by the aristocracy, Josiah Wedgwood made these vases commercially available to an emerging aspiring middle class eager to display a piece of the Classical past in their drawing rooms.
In the midst of a rapidly changing Britain, these vases came to symbolise the birth of European Civilisation, the epitome of good taste and the timelessness that would later be celebrated by Jonathan Keats in his Ode on a Grecian Urn.
With
Jenny Uglow
Writer and biographer
Rosemary Sweet
Professor of urban history at the University of Leicester
And
Caroline McCaffrey-Howarth
Lecturer in the history of art at the University of Edinburgh
Producer: Eliane Glaser
On radio
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