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Pagod Incense Burner

Modeler Johann Friedrich Eberlein (German, 1696 - 1749)
Manufacturer Meissen Porcelain Manufactory (German, founded in 1710)
Date1735-1740
MediumHard-paste porcelain with enamel and gilding
DimensionsOverall: 6 3/4 × 4 1/2 × 3 5/8 inches (17.15 × 11.43 × 9.21 cm)
Credit LinePurchase: William Rockhill Nelson Trust
Object number61-3
MarkingsCrossed sword mark
On View
On view
Gallery Location
  • 119
DescriptionFigure wearing dark orange pagoda hat seated on puce cushion with gold tassels; wears white costume decorated with dark orange flowers and bordered in yellow. A parrot is perched on the left wrist and a green apple is in the right hand. The figure's head is turned toward the parrot. White saliented base with three gold borders.Exhibition History

Luxury and Passion: Inventing French Porcelain, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri, August 13 2022–August 12 2024, no cat.

Gallery Label
The aristocracy of 18th-century Europe favored an opulent lifestyle enriched with decorative wares in a variety of luxurious materials, including gold, silver and porcelain.  Inspired by exoticism, the Meissen Pagod with a parrot perched on her arm is a European interpretation of a female version of the Asian god of happiness. Not simply decorative, the pagod's open mouth allowed incense aromas to escape from her hollow form. Bringing refinement to the table and, like the pagod and Boy Masquerading as a Sultan, reflecting the European fascination with foreign cultures, the Meissen Cream Pot is ornately decorated with gilded, exotic scenes including palm trees and monkeys. The gilded Sugar Box, produced in Augsburg, an 18th-century goldsmithing center, may have been part of a fashionable, elaborate traveling service.   
Provenance

With A. & L. Wittekind, Inc., London, by August 25, 1959;

Purchased from A. & L. Wittekind, Inc. by Rosenberg and Stiebel, New York, stock no. 3851, August 25, 1959-1961 [1];

Purchased from Rosenberg and Stiebel by The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, 1961.

NOTES:

[1] Frick Art Reference Library, New York, MS.065 Rosenberg & Stiebel Archive, Sales and Inventory Records, Purchases and Sales, 1959-1970.

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