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Compotier rond
Factory:
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
Painter:
Evans, Etienne
Edwards, George
(After)
Soft-paste porcelain dish, decorated with a bleu céleste ground, a reserve painted in enamels with a scene of a duck () in front of tree and water, and gilding.The name of the bird, Plongeon Damerique, is inscribed in black enamel on the base.
Soft-paste porcelain, moulded, and decorated with a bleu céleste ground, painting in greyish-blue, several shades of green, yellow, dark pink, pale greyish-pink, brown, grey, and black enamels, and gilding. Circular with deep, curved sides, the rim divided by indentations into eight segments. There is a suspension hole in the footring. The dish has a bleu céleste ground with a circular central, reserve framed by an inner band of gilding tooled with scrolling leaves, and an outer garland of large husks with two loose ends at the bottom. The reserve is painted in polychrome with a duck standing in front of a tree with water on one side and trees in the background. There is a band of gilding round the rim, dentilated on the exterior. The reverse is inscribed in black enamel, 'Plongeon Damerique'.
History note: Collection of Madame Dhainaut; sold Sotheby's 10 December 1936, Catalogue of a Very Choice Collection of Works of Art, The Property of Madame Dhainaut of Paris, part of lot 49; Mallett & Son, 40 New Bond Street, London, Exhibition (1937) of Old English Furniture Needlework, Silver, Old Chinese, Sèvres and English Porcelains and Objects of Art, p. 38, part of no. 274; Louis C.G. Clarke, MA, (1881-1960) Cambridge, by whom bequesathed
L.C.G. Clarke Bequest, 1960
Diameter: 21.4 cm
Height: 4.2 cm
Method of acquisition: Bequeathed (1961-04-27) by Clarke, Louis Colville Gray
18th Century, Mid#
Louis XV
Production date:
AD 1768
: date lette for 1768
Bird decoration after George Edwards was first used at Sèvres on the service commissioned by the 3rd Duke of Richmond (1735-1806) in November 1765, and made in 1766 (with one exception of 1765). This was probably followed by the Razumosvsky Service of 1767 (except one piece 1766). At least five other services or groups of pieces are known between 1767-1770 which have comparable decoration and the names of the birds inscribed on the bases. They can be distinguished by the different designs of their gilding. This compotier and its pair probably belonged to a service with gold husks around the reserves which in the late 19th century belonged to Count A.D. Sheremetev (or Chérémèteff), of St Petersburg. Part of the service, not including compotiers ronds, was displayed in London by Asher Wertheimer in Bond Streeet, with other Sèvres from the Sheremetev collection in 1906. David Peters identified the service as one purchased on 5 November 1768 by an unnamed buyer, whom he considered was probably the M. de Cotensky who bought twenty-four plates and two seaux à glace on 9 March 1769, pieces not included in the earlier anonymous order. Peters identified Cotensky as probably Nikolai Konstantinovich Chotinski, Russian chargé d’afaires to France from 24 December 1767 to January 1774, and again from 28 August 1780 to 25 April 1782. This would account for the presence of the service in Russia. This hypothesis is supported by the presence of two seaux à glace (ice pails) of similar format and with the same gilding design, with the date letter for 1769, in the Dodge Collection, at the Detroit Institue of Arts. The service ordered in November 1768 included 8 compotiers at 45 livres and 8 compotiers at 51 livres.
George Edwards, 'A Natural History of Birds', was published in London in four volumes in 1743, 1747, 1750 and 1751. A French edition was published in 1745, 1747, and vols 3 and 4 in 1751.The Plongeon D'amerique (the Red-breasted goosander) was painted after a plate in Part II, Vol. II, 1747 (see documentation). It also occurs on an oval liquer cooler painted by Aloncle in the Razumovsky Service of 1767 (see Documentation, Schwarz, 2005). Selma Schwarz noted that many of the names of the birds inscribed on the porcelain services do not coincide with the names given by Edwards, as this does not. The painters often added a place of origin drawn from the text, but sometimes inaccurately as a result of misunderstanding. Etienne Evans, was one of the factory’s leading bird painters, but was not so talented as Louis-Denis Armand, Aloncle, or Chappuis. His was described as ‘travaillant fort médiocrement’ in 1755.
Decoration composed of ground colour ( blue céleste) enamels ( greyish-blue, several shades of green, yellow, dark pink, pale greyish-pink, brown, grey, and black) gold
Lead-glaze
Soft-paste porcelain
Moulding
: Soft-paste porcelain, moulded, and decorated with a bleu céleste ground, painting in greyish-blue, shades of green, yellow, dark pink, pale greyish-pink, brown, grey, and black enamels, and gilding
Lead-glazing
Inscription present: resembling a dagger
Inscription present: script letters
Inscription present: rectangular white paper now pale buff
Inscription present: rectangular white paper label, smaller than the other, now pale buff
Accession number: C.37A-1961
Primary reference Number: 93573
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) "Compotier rond" Web page available at: https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/93573 Accessed: 2024-11-22 05:10:30
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{{cite web|url=https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/93573
|title=Compotier rond
|author=The Fitzwilliam Museum|accessdate=2024-11-22 05:10:30|publisher=The
University of Cambridge}}
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<div class="text-center"> <figure class="figure"> <img src="https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/imagestore/aa/aa23/C_37A_1961_20_281_29.jpg" alt="Compotier rond" class="img-fluid" /> <figcaption class="figure-caption text-info">Compotier rond</figcaption> </figure> </div>
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