each decorated with foliate bands in greens and blues above a patinated band (2) 39cm high
Footnote
Provenance: Paul Reeves, London Literature: Ceresole, Anne, ‘The Work in Cloisonné of Clement John Heaton’, The Journal of the Decorative Arts Society 1850 - the Present, No. 20 (1996), pp. 34-42 Note: Clement Heaton, an early member of A.H. Mackmurdo’s Century Guild, set up his company ‘Heatons Cloisonné-Mosaic Ltd’ at 6 Berners Street, London in 1887, a year after selling his share in his father’s lucrative stained glass business Heaton, Butler & Bayne for £4,800. He patented his enamelling technique in 1886, inspired by medieval techniques which precluded the firing process and which instead used coloured cements: a mixture of resin, beeswax, sulphur marble dust and coloured pigments. Hardening over time, these cements could be polished to give the soft matt finish characteristic of Heaton’s work and seen in the present example.