1985.R.928.a-b, Coffeepot, porcelain, Jingdezhen, China, c. 1790


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The bulbous body, domed lid, and strapwork handle seen here are characteristic of late 18th-century Chinese export coffeepots. The handle of intertwined strips of clay terminating in modeled sprigs of flowers was copied from pottery made in Staffordshire, England, in the 1770s and 1780s. Similarly, the linear and near monochromatic quality of the painting is derived from English transfer-printed decoration. In the early 1750s, English potters invented an ornamental process using an engraved metal plate. Once "inked" with ceramic glaze, the design was printed onto tissue paper. The paper was then affixed to the damp clay, and the printed decoration was transferred onto the vessel by burnishing. In this manner, entire sets of dinnerware could be ornamented with identical designs, thereby reducing labor costs and making ceramics more affordable. Chinese potters did not use this new process. Nevertheless, they ornamented huge services in this graphic style, painting every line by hand. 

This pot features a beautifully painted but unidentified coat of arms. It incorporates a baron's coronet and the motto LE BON TEMPS VIENDRA (Good Times Will Come). 

Excerpt from
Dallas Museum of Art, Decorative Arts Highlights from the Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1995), 115.

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PROVENANCE 
Until 1985: Emery Reves (1904-1983) and Wendy Reves (1916-2007) (owned jointly), La Pausa, Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France [1]

From 1985: Dallas Museum of Art, The Wendy and Emery Reves Collection, gift of Wendy Reves (1916-2007) [1]

[1] According to: Olivier Meslay and Martha MacLeod, From Chanel to Reves (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 2015), 4-5.

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The Metropolitan Museum of Art~Read more about Chinese Export Porcelain

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General Description
 
The bulbous body, domed lid, and strapwork handle seen here are characteristic of late 18th-century Chinese export coffeepots. The handle of intertwined strips of clay terminating in modeled sprigs of flowers was copied from pottery made in Staffordshire, England, in the 1770s and 1780s. Similarly, the linear and near monochromatic quality of the painting is derived from English transfer-printed decoration. In the early 1750s, English potters invented an ornamental process using an engraved metal plate. Once "inked" with ceramic glaze, the design was printed onto tissue paper. The paper was then affixed to the damp clay, and the printed decoration was transferred onto the vessel by burnishing. In this manner, entire sets of dinnerware could be ornamented with identical designs, thereby reducing labor costs and making ceramics more affordable. Chinese potters did not use this new process. Nevertheless, they ornamented huge services in this graphic style, painting every line by hand. 

This pot features a beautifully painted but unidentified coat of arms. It incorporates a baron's coronet and the motto LE BON TEMPS VIENDRA (Good Times Will Come). 

Excerpt from
Dallas Museum of Art, Decorative Arts Highlights from the Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1995), 115.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 
The Metropolitan Museum of Art~Read more about Chinese Export Porcelain

Notes
TMS Updates
provenance
search dates
text entry
place of origin

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Until 1985: Emery Reves (1904-1983) and Wendy Reves (1916-2007) (owned jointly), La Pausa, Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France [1]

From 1985: Dallas Museum of Art, The Wendy and Emery Reves Collection, gift of Wendy Reves (1916-2007) [1]

[1] According to: Olivier Meslay and Martha MacLeod, From Chanel to Reves (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 2015), 4-5.

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1985.R.928.a-b
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
burnishing (polishing): AAT: 300053869
%Archived
vessels (containers): AAT: 300193015
linear forms: AAT: 300234452
handles: AAT: 300024927
*Decorative Arts and Design
decorative arts: AAT: 300054168
@bartsch-allen
containers (hierarchy name): AAT: 300045611
containers (receptacles): AAT: 300197197
beverages: AAT: 300389821
lids (covers): AAT: 300045712
Europe (continent): TGN: 1000003
Reves_Wendy: DMA
Reves_Emery: DMA
Villa La Pausa: DMA
Reves_Emery: ULAN: 500444887
England (nation): TGN: 7002445
plates (dishes): AAT: 300042991
China (nation): TGN: 1000111
Asia (continent): TGN: 1000004
porcelain (visual works): AAT: 300386874
porcelain (material): AAT: 300010662
Chinese export porcelain: AAT: 300387409
famille (ceramics style): AAT: 300265757
Jingdezhen (China): TGN: 1069298
coffee services: AAT:300227293
coffee (food / dye): AAT: 300254662
spigots (container components): AAT: 300197240
flower (motif): AAT: 300375563
coats of arms and coat of arms elements: AAT: 300138225
coffeepots: AAT: 300072215
liquid: AAT: 300015378
spouts (container components): AAT: 300197224
strapwork: AAT: 300010200
dinner services: AAT: 300227296
monochrome: AAT: 300137660
Staffordshire (county/England): TGN: 7008174
potters: AAT: 300025414
domed: AAT: 300187629
pots (containers): AAT: 300045697
barons (noblemen): AAT: 300236029
motto: DMA
source file
object_notes_2_c-0065.xml.nores