Anti-Slavery Medallion

Anti-Slavery Medallion

WW-1787-016376
1787·Stoneware (jasperware and black basalt), cut steel, and ivory·5.2 × 4.1 × 0.7 cm (2 1/16 × 1 5/8 × 1/4 in.)

<p>This small plaque featuring a kneeling figure of an enslaved African man beneath the words <em>Am I not a man and a brother?</em> became a symbol of the British antislavery movement. Wedgwood distributed these plaques to advance the abolitionist message; the figure’s supplicant posture was intended to stir benevolence and support for abolition among the white recipients of this token. Made from Josiah Wedgwood’s fashionable jasperware ceramic, more typically used to emulate ancient cameos, the plaque is framed by cut-steel “gems” and set in ivory from Africa. Despite its abolitionist slogan, the medallion embodies the entanglement of British taste, industrial innovation, and colonial exploitation in the late 1700s.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1787
Dimensions
5.2 × 4.1 × 0.7 cm (2 1/16 × 1 5/8 × 1/4 in.)

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Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1787
Dimensions
5.2 × 4.1 × 0.7 cm (2 1/16 × 1 5/8 × 1/4 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1787-016376

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified