Face jug

The Coventry Face Jug, unearthed beside the site of the local Benedictine priory.[1] Herbert Art Gallery and Museum, Coventry.
Medieval German face jug

A face jug is a jug pottery that depicts a face. There are examples in the pottery of ancient Greece, and that of Pre-Columbian America. Early European examples date from the 13th century, and the German stoneware Bartmann jug was a popular later medieval and Renaissance form. Later, the British Toby Jug was a popular form, that became mass-produced. Especially in America, a number of modern craft potters[who?] make pieces, mostly continuing the 19th-century African-American slave folk art tradition.

The Jug in the Form of a Head, Self-Portrait (1899) by Paul Gauguin is a rare fine art example.

  1. ^ Goulden, Barbara. THE HERBERT REVEALS ALL Coventry Telegraph 30 October 2008