Potpourri Jar
Manufacturer
Saint-Cloud
(French, 1664 - 1766)
Date1730-1740
MediumSoft-paste porcelain
DimensionsOverall: 7 7/8 × 7 inches (19.99 × 17.78 cm)
Credit LinePurchase: the Esther Clark Garnett Fund
Object numberF97-20 A,B
On View
On viewGallery Location
- 122
Collections
DescriptionWhite spherical form on a circular foot; hemispherical pierced lid surmounted with pin cone knop; body molded with broad scallops at top and broad ribs below; decorated with applied leaves, vines and flowers.Exhibition HistoryLuxury and Passion: Inventing French Porcelain, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri, August 13 2022–August 12 2024, no cat.
Although larger manufactories such as Vincennes, Sèvres and Meissen dominated European porcelain production, 18th-century regional manufactories were also successful. The lush flowers of the Höchst Sugar Bowl and the Mennecy Jug reflect the exceptional painted decorations for which these two smaller manufactories were known, while the delicate, applied leaves of the Saint-Cloud Potpourri Jar exhibit this manufacturer's characteristic relief style inspired by Chinese blanc de chine (white) porcelain. The Chantilly Vase drew from brightly polychromed Japanese ceramics for its decorative motifs. As European porcelain production developed, forms were diversified. In an era of frivolity and luxury wares, flowers could be watered with this rare Vincennes Watering Can or arranged in the Sèvres Vase à Compartiments. Although the Vincennes Tankard's intended function was utilitarian, its exotic, gilded decoration of birds and palm trees against the mottled lapis bleu ground indicates it chiefly served as a status symbol.
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