These images are provided for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons License (BY-NC-ND). To license a high resolution version, please contact our image library who will discuss fees, terms and waivers.
Download this imageCreative commons explained - what it means, how you can use our's and other people's content.
Cat seated with Mouse in its Paw
Factory: Bow Porcelain Manufactory
Soft-paste porcelain figure of a cat, painted in enamels.
Soft-paste porcelain containing bone ash, press-moulded, and painted over lead-glaze in pale blue, dark puce, two shades of purplish-grey, and brown enamels. The underside is concave and glazed. The pear-shaped base has a scrolled edge and a small, stepped mound at the front. The cat sits at the narrow end of the base, looking straight ahead, and holding a mouse to itself with its right front leg. Its left paw rests on the mound, into which another mouse is disappearing, its back and tail still visible. The cat is painted to resemble a tabby in shades of purplish-grey. On one side there is a fingerprint. The mice are brown, and the mound is pale blue. The scrolls are picked out in dark puce.
History note: Christie's, 15 June, 1922, part of lot 32, two cats; purchased for £77 on behalf of Dr J.W.L. Glaisher, FRS, Trinity College, Cambridge
Dr J.W.L. Glaisher Bequest
Depth: 5 cm
Height: 8.1 cm
Method of acquisition: Bequeathed (1928-12-07) by Glaisher, J. W. L., Dr
18th Century, Mid#
George II
Circa
1753
CE
-
1758
CE
Cats played a very important role in eighteenth-century households by catching mice which would otherwise have invaded kitchens and larders.
Label text from the exhibition ‘Feast and Fast: The Art of Food in Europe, 1500–1800’, on display at The Fitzwilliam Museum from 26 November 2019 until 31 August 2020: In early modern Europe, cats were kept primarily as ‘food guardians’ to prevent vermin from eating provisions. Some earned their keep as mousers, such as this tiny feline whose mouse-catching abilities have been immortalised in soft-paste porcelain: with one paw firmly placed on a mouse-hole (into which a lucky mouse escapes), she traps a less fortunate one in the other. Other cats, like the contented one in Valentino’s kitchen scene (displayed nearby), appear to have preferred living off kitchen scraps fed to them by indulgent servants.
Decoration composed of enamels ( pale blue, dark puce, two shades of purplish-grey, and brown)
presumed lead
Lead-glaze
presumed phosphatic
Soft-paste porcelain
Press-moulding
: Soft-paste porcelain containing bone ash, press-moulded, and painted over lead-glaze in pale blue, dark puce, two shades of purplish-grey, and brown enamels
Lead-glazing
Accession number: C.3055-1928
Primary reference Number: 41632
Old object number: 3799B
Stable URI
Owner or interested party:
The Fitzwilliam Museum
Associated department:
Applied Arts
This record can be cited in the Harvard Bibliographic style using the text below:
The Fitzwilliam Museum (2024) "Cat seated with Mouse in its Paw" Web page available at: https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/41632 Accessed: 2024-11-05 04:58:36
To cite this record on Wikipedia you can use this code snippet:
{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/41632
|title=Cat seated with Mouse in its Paw
|author=The Fitzwilliam Museum|accessdate=2024-11-05 04:58:36|publisher=The
University of Cambridge}}
To call these data via our API (remember this needs to be authenticated) you can use this code snippet:
https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/api/v1/objects/object-41632
To use this as a simple code embed, copy this string:
<div class="text-center"> <figure class="figure"> <img src="https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/imagestore/aa/aa3/C_3055_1928_281_29.jpg" alt="Cat seated with Mouse in its Paw" class="img-fluid" /> <figcaption class="figure-caption text-info">Cat seated with Mouse in its Paw</figcaption> </figure> </div>
Updates about future exhibitions and displays, family activities, virtual events & news. You'll be the first to know...