The Bass Red Triangle, the first trademark in Britain, has been used for over 150 years to mark bottles of their pale ale.
Bass is the brand name for an English beer brewed in Burton-upon-Trent. Bass is most particularly associated with their pale ale. Its distinctive Red Triangle logo was Britain's first registered trademark.
History
The Bass & Co Brewery was established by William Bass in 1777 and was one of the first breweries in Burton-upon-Trent. Early in the company's history, Bass was exporting bottled beer around the world with the Baltic trade being supplied through the port of Hull. Growing demand led to the building of a second brewery in Burton-upon-Trent in 1799 by Michael Bass, the founder's son. The water produced from boreholes in the locality became popular with brewers, with 30 different breweries operating in the mid 19th centuries. By the end of the 20th century, closures and consolidation has left Bass with one of two large amalgamated factories remaining in the town.
The Bass Brewers company was bought by the Belgian brewer Interbrew in June 2000 — the beer is now produced under licence by Coors. The production licence comes to an end in 2005, and the licence to brew Draught Bass will be taken up by Wolverhampton & Dudley Breweries PLC, who will start production at the Marston's Brewery, also in Burton.
Next to the brewery, the Bass Museum of Brewing, recently renamed as 'The Coors Visitor Centre', is Burton-upon-Trent's largest tourist attraction, presenting the history of brewing in the town.
Bottles of Bass beer can be seen alongside the champagne on the Bar at the Folies-Bergère in Edouard Manet's painting of 1882.
Red Triangle logo
Bass was a pioneer in international brand marketing. The Bass Red Triangle is one of the world's oldest logos and was the first trademark to be registered in Britain. The 1875 Trademarks Registration Act came into effect on the 1 January 1876 and that New Year's Eve, a Bass employee waited overnight outside the registrar's office, in order to be the first in the queue to register a trademark the next morning. In fact Bass got the first two registrations, the first being the Bass Red Triangle for their pale ale and the second the Bass Red Diamond for their strong ale.
Bass in art
Although today the Red Triangle has been eclipsed by larger brands, the strength of the logo can be seen by its appearance in art and literature through history. Bottles of Bass Pale Ale bearing the triangle can be seen in Edouard Manet's 1882 painting Bar at the Folies-Bergère. Bottles of Bass can also be seen in over 40 paintings by Picasso, mostly at the height of his Cubist period around 1914. Some of his paintings at the time included collage elements, and the Bass label provided a convenient bold symbol that would have been as immediately recognised at the time. (E.g. [1] (http://www.tamu.edu/mocl/picasso/works/1914/opp14-11.html), [2] (http://www.tamu.edu/mocl/picasso/works/1914/opp14-54.html) & [3] (http://www.photo.rmn.fr/us/bi/search.html?tous=%20Bouteille%20Bass&rpp=9&aur_offset_rec=23).)
Other examples are:
- The Spanish artist Juan Gris followed Picasso's lead and incorporated the Red Triangle into his Cubist paintings of the 1920s, most notably in La Bouteille de Bass of 1925.
- John Emms a student of Lord Leighton became a prolific painter of animals most especially dogs, including Smooth Coated Fox Terrier (http://store.encore-editions.com/Detailed_Print_Information/John_Emms-Smooth_Coated_Fox_Terrier.html) which shows a bottle of Bass in the background and Vice Regal which also shows a dog with a bottle of Bass.
- Charles Spencelayh's painting The Steward, depicting a steward opening a bottle of Bass, may have been commissioned by the Brewery to be used in advertising.
- Levi Wells Prentice included a bottle in his Still Life with Basses Ale, c. 1890, also shows the Dog's Head trademark of one of Bass' American importers.
- Arthur Rackham's illustrations for The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame, use the Bass logo to represent beer.
- Quentin Blake showed a bottle of Bass in one of his illustrations for Roald Dahl's book The Twits.
- More recently Tom Mabon feature Bass ale in Beer and Fruit painted in 1999.
References
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