GENERAL DESCRIPTION
This tureen-on-stand is a magnificent example of a Chinese adaptation of a European prototype. Although the actual model sent to China could have been made of pottery, wax, wood, or pewter, the ultimate inspiration was likely a French silver tureen in the late rococo taste. During the third quarter of the 18th century, French silversmiths produced many tureens featuring elaborate finials, handles, and feet. The fluted top and sides are also suggestive of metal examples in the emerging neoclassical taste. A date of 1775 for the manufacture of this porcelain example is indicated by the fact that a tureen of the same form was part of the Royal Swedish Gripsholm Service given in 1775 to King Gustav III by the Swedish East India Company.
Even though tureens of this model must have been expensive because of the large amount of labor required to produce porcelain of such complexity, they were popular among Europe’s wealthy, and examples with various decorative schemes are known. Ribbed, leaf-footed, and with cabbage finial, this tureen features delicately painted neoclassical-style garlands and sprigs of flowers similar to painting found on contemporary French porcelain made at the Sèvres factory, but the scrolled plumed mask handles relate more closely to earlier work done at Meissen, Germany.
Adapted from
- Dallas Museum of Art, The Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1985), 204.
- Dallas Museum of Art, Decorative Arts Highlights from the Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1995), 112.
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This note was tagged #draft by Megan Wanttie, summer 2016 and harvested to Brain and Google Docs. I am removing the #draft tag and replacing it with #incomplete so that the note can be reviewed for formatting, tags, and text. The existing #drafts in Brain and Google Docs are on a list to be deleted. I am also adding department tags so that the note can be routed. (EAS, 08/26/2016)
This tureen is a magnificent example of a Chinese adaptation of a European silver design. Ribbed, leaf-footed, and with cabbage finial, its form is possibly derived from a tureen like the one in the huge French silver service made for Empress Catherine the Great of Russia in 1775 and presented by her to her favorite, Count Orloff.
The scrolled Indian plumed mask handles, which trace to the headdresses of oriental and South American princes seen in 17th century European travel engravings, and the delicately painted naturalistic European style strewn flowers, are holdovers from earlier Rococo Meissen porcelain.
The tureen's four-squared stance, faciated leaf-and-berry molded border, and the entwined green and gold leaf painted border, are neo-classic elements in later 18th century taste. The sparing use of overglaze enamel colors -- rose, green, iron-red, purple -- as well as gold, embellish the lovely white porcelain rather than obscuring it as in often overdecorated 19th century porcelain.
Excerpt from
Dallas Museum of Art, The Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1985), 204.
This tureen-on-stand was modeled after a European prototype. Although the actual model sent to China could have been made of pottery, wax, wood, or pewter, the ultimate inspiration was likely a French silver tureen in the late rococo taste. During the third quarter of the 18th century, French silversmiths produced many tureens featuring elaborate finials, handles, and feet. The fluted top and sides are also suggestive of metal examples in the emerging neoclassical taste. A date of 1775 for the manufacture of this porcelain example is indicated by the fact that a tureen of the same form was part of the Royal Swedish Gripsholm Service given in 1775 to King Gustav III by the Swedish East India Company.
Even though tureens of this model must have been expensive because of the large amount of labor required to produce porcelain of such complexity, they were popular among Europe’s wealthy, and examples with various decorative schemes are known. The Dallas version features neoclassical-style garlands and sprigs of flowers similar to painting found on contemporary French porcelain made at the Sèvres factory, but the masks on the scrolled handles relate more closely to earlier work done at Meissen, Germany.
Excerpt from
Dallas Museum of Art, Decorative Arts Highlights from the Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1995), 112.
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cultures
Geography
Process/materials
Gilt
Historical periods
c. 1775
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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The Metropolitan Museum of Art~Read more about Chinese Export Porcelain
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Apply to objects where number equals 1985.R.873.A-C
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General Description
This tureen-on-stand is a magnificent example of a Chinese adaptation of a European prototype. Although the actual model sent to China could have been made of pottery, wax, wood, or pewter, the ultimate inspiration was likely a French silver tureen in the late rococo taste. During the third quarter of the 18th century, French silversmiths produced many tureens featuring elaborate finials, handles, and feet. The fluted top and sides are also suggestive of metal examples in the emerging neoclassical taste. A date of 1775 for the manufacture of this porcelain example is indicated by the fact that a tureen of the same form was part of the Royal Swedish Gripsholm Service given in 1775 to King Gustav III by the Swedish East India Company.
Even though tureens of this model must have been expensive because of the large amount of labor required to produce porcelain of such complexity, they were popular among Europe’s wealthy, and examples with various decorative schemes are known. Ribbed, leaf-footed, and with cabbage finial, this tureen features delicately painted neoclassical-style garlands and sprigs of flowers similar to painting found on contemporary French porcelain made at the Sèvres factory, but the scrolled plumed mask handles relate more closely to earlier work done at Meissen, Germany.
Adapted from
- Dallas Museum of Art, The Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1985), 204.
- Dallas Museum of Art, Decorative Arts Highlights from the Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1995), 112.
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
Web Resources
Notes
TMS Updates
provenance
place of origin
search dates
text entry
This note was tagged #draft by Megan Wanttie, summer 2016 and harvested to Brain and Google Docs. I am removing the #draft tag and replacing it with #incomplete so that the note can be reviewed for formatting, tags, and text. The existing #drafts in Brain and Google Docs are on a list to be deleted. I am also adding department tags so that the note can be routed. (EAS, 08/26/2016)
This tureen is a magnificent example of a Chinese adaptation of a European silver design. Ribbed, leaf-footed, and with cabbage finial, its form is possibly derived from a tureen like the one in the huge French silver service made for Empress Catherine the Great of Russia in 1775 and presented by her to her favorite, Count Orloff.
The scrolled Indian plumed mask handles, which trace to the headdresses of oriental and South American princes seen in 17th century European travel engravings, and the delicately painted naturalistic European style strewn flowers, are holdovers from earlier Rococo Meissen porcelain.
The tureen's four-squared stance, faciated leaf-and-berry molded border, and the entwined green and gold leaf painted border, are neo-classic elements in later 18th century taste. The sparing use of overglaze enamel colors -- rose, green, iron-red, purple -- as well as gold, embellish the lovely white porcelain rather than obscuring it as in often overdecorated 19th century porcelain.
Excerpt from
Dallas Museum of Art, The Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1985), 204.
This tureen-on-stand was modeled after a European prototype. Although the actual model sent to China could have been made of pottery, wax, wood, or pewter, the ultimate inspiration was likely a French silver tureen in the late rococo taste. During the third quarter of the 18th century, French silversmiths produced many tureens featuring elaborate finials, handles, and feet. The fluted top and sides are also suggestive of metal examples in the emerging neoclassical taste. A date of 1775 for the manufacture of this porcelain example is indicated by the fact that a tureen of the same form was part of the Royal Swedish Gripsholm Service given in 1775 to King Gustav III by the Swedish East India Company.
Even though tureens of this model must have been expensive because of the large amount of labor required to produce porcelain of such complexity, they were popular among Europe’s wealthy, and examples with various decorative schemes are known. The Dallas version features neoclassical-style garlands and sprigs of flowers similar to painting found on contemporary French porcelain made at the Sèvres factory, but the masks on the scrolled handles relate more closely to earlier work done at Meissen, Germany.
Excerpt from
Dallas Museum of Art, Decorative Arts Highlights from the Wendy and Emery Reves Collection (Dallas, Texas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1995), 112.
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cultures
Geography
Process/materials
Gilt
Historical periods
c. 1775
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.873.A-C
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