Paris Porcelain - Polychrome Basin With Neoclassical Decor - Empire Period
Paris Porcelain - Polychrome Basin With Neoclassical Decor - Empire Period-photo-2
Paris Porcelain - Polychrome Basin With Neoclassical Decor - Empire Period-photo-3
Paris Porcelain - Polychrome Basin With Neoclassical Decor - Empire Period-photo-4
Paris Porcelain - Polychrome Basin With Neoclassical Decor - Empire Period-photo-1
Paris Porcelain - Polychrome Basin With Neoclassical Decor - Empire Period-photo-2
Paris Porcelain - Polychrome Basin With Neoclassical Decor - Empire Period-photo-3

Paris Porcelain - Polychrome Basin With Neoclassical Decor - Empire Period

Oblong basin in Paris porcelain with rich polychrome decoration of antique attributes on an apricot background. Garland on a green background framed by gold threads

The porcelain of Paris owes its fame above all to the hard porcelain factories which multiplied there from 1771, when it became possible to obtain kaolin from Saint-Yrieix la-Perche next door of Limoges and to compete with Sèvres whose exclusive privilege was slackened. In Paris and the surrounding area, new factories were established, escaping all prosecution, thanks to the patronage of royal princes. These were in turn, that of the Count of Provence in Clignancourt named Manufacture de Monsieur (1771), those of Marie-Antoinette, rue Thiroux called the Manufacture de la Reine (1776), that of the Duke of Angoulême, rue de Bondy, founded by Dihl and Guerhard (1780), or the Duc d'Orléans (1784). At the end of the 18th century, there were more than twenty hard porcelain factories in Paris. Among the main factories are those with the signs of rue de la Fontaine-au-Roi, also known as the Courtille factory, directed by Locré (1771), rue Popincourt, founded by Jean Nast (1782), rue du Petit Carrousel ( 1774), the Faubourg Saint-Denis or Faubourg Saint-Lazare established by Pierre Hannong (1771). Their production always aimed to imitate the works of Sèvres, whose processes they tried to appropriate and attract workers. They were forbidden to use the gold and colored backgrounds reserved solely for the king's manufacture, but these ordinances were not always respected and, in 1784 and 1787, new decrees were issued granting them complete freedom.
450 €
credit

Period: 19th century

Style: Consulat, Empire

Condition: Bon état, un cheveux en etoile et petit eclat a peine visible

Length: 34cm

Width: 24cm

Height: 9cm

Reference (ID): 889978

Availability: In stock

Print

7 rue Chabanais
Paris 75002, France

0686689259

Follow the dealer

CONTACT

SIGN UP TO OUR NEWSLETTER

facebook
instagram

Au Singe Vert
Paris Porcelain - Polychrome Basin With Neoclassical Decor - Empire Period
889978-main-61eed8c02b613.jpg

0686689259



*We will send you a confirmation email from info@proantic.com .
Please check your messages, including the spam folder.