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Dudson Museum original linocut

Dudson Museum original linocut

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Another one in my series, I love the shapes of the historic bottle ovens in Stoke-on-Trent, the major hub of the UK pottery industry during the 19th and 20th centuries. These ovens were phased out when the Clean Air Act was brought in, and most were demolished, but over 40 still remain around the city, and I find them a fascinating subject for my work as each is a slightly different shape, and in different states of repair and surroundings. The Dudson Museum is actually housed inside this historic bottle oven, where all of the ware from the original Dudson factory in Hanley was fired.

This item will be posted to you by Dailawyr Prints within 3 days of receiving payment.

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Full description

This is a three-stage reduction linocut of the Dudson Museum in Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent.

One of a limited edition of 17, on Japanese Ho-Sho paper with Caligo Safewash oil-based inks and traditional oil-based gold ink. The image is 10cm x 15.5cm, (roughly A6) and the paper is 20 x 14cm. Each print is hand-inked and hand-printed, so each is slightly different giving them each a unique quality. As this is a reduction print, the lino plate is gradually cut away during the process so that no more prints can be made.

Designed by Mary Parker in Stoke-on-Trent

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