Sèvres
A Napoleon III Three Piece Garniture Set
£55,000
A Napoleon III Gilt-Bronze Mounted Sèvres Garniture Set. Comprising a Centrepiece and a Pair of Vases with lids, the painted panels by 'Robert'. Each...
Dimensions
Height: 73 cm (29 in)Description
A Napoleon III Gilt-Bronze Mounted Sèvres Garniture Set. Comprising a Centrepiece and a Pair of Vases with lids, the painted panels by ‘Robert’.
Each painted on the reverse with bouquets of flowers, to the front with romantic scenes, and mounted with bronze female ‘caryatids’, flowers and foliage.
Centerpiece:
Height 51 cm / 20 inches
Width 48 cm / 19 inches
Pair of Vases:
Height 73 cm / 29 inches
Width 35 cm / 15 inches
Date
Circa 1870
Origin
France
Medium
Porcelain
Signature
Signed to the painted panels 'Robert'.
The Sèvres Porcelain manufactory was founded to the east of Paris in the disused royal château of Vincennes, late in 1739-40.
It was not until 1756 that it moved to the village of Sèvres, west of Paris, strategically placed en route to King Louis XV’s palace of Versailles. Here it was also adjacent to Louis’s mistress Madame de Pompadour’s own château at Bellevue.
A great lover of Sèvres porcelain, she was delighted with the factory’s new location – as she knew she could entice Louis to take a greater interest in it when it was so near to their own residences. Indeed, the King became such a keen patron of the factory that when in 1759 it ran into financial difficulties, he bought out the shareholders and became the sole proprietor. The factory remained a royal enterprise until the French Revolution, when it was nationalised.
Sèvres’ position at the beginning of the nineteenth century was extremely precarious. No longer a royal enterprise, and having lost much of its clientele during the revolution, its funding reflected the ruinous state of the French economy.
However the Manufactory rose to this challenge, achieving the remarkable accomplishment of staying continuously in the forefront of European ceramic production despite the myriad changes in technology, taste, and patronage that occurred during this tumultuous century. The vast and diverse production of the Sèvres factory in the nineteenth century resists easy characterisation, and its history during this period reflects many of the changes affecting French society in the years between 1800 and 1900.
Important designers and influential artistic directors were always at the forefront of Sèvres’s innovation. Famous artists who designed for Sèvres have included Louis-Simon Boizot, Théophile Fragonard, Hector Guimard, Serge Poliakoff , Auguste Rodin and Louise Bourgeois. One of the most influential artists was Albert Ernest Carrier-Belleuse who became artistic director in 1876 and was famed for his designs.
Bibliography:
Meyer, Jonathan. Great Exhibitions – London, New York, Paris, Philadelphia, 1851-1900, Antique Collectors’ Club, (Woodbridge, UK), 2006.
Savill, Rosalind. The Wallace Collection: Catalogue of Sèvres Porcelain, Vol III, Paul Holberton, 1998.
Paredes, Liana. Sèvres Then and Now: Tradition and Innovation in Porcelain’, 1750-2000, D Giles Ltd, 2009.