A pair of French mid 19th century Louis XVI st. cobalt blue Sèvres porcelain and ormolu lidded pot pourri urns
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A sensational and extremely decorative pair of French mid 19th century Louis XVI st. cobalt blue Sèvres porcelain and ormolu lidded pot pourri urns. Each urn is raised by a square ormolu base with a superb Greek key design below... — Read More
A sensational and extremely decorative pair of French mid 19th century Louis XVI st. cobalt blue Sèvres porcelain and ormolu lidded pot pourri urns. Each urn is raised by a square ormolu base with a superb Greek key design below the elegantly curved socle shaped pedestal support with richly chased acanthus leaves with lovely interlocking and tied fluted wrap around bands. The remarkable cobalt blue Sèvres porcelain body displays impressive intricately detailed lions at each side with exceptional attention to detail and hoops in their mouths connected by draped garments reminiscent of Hercules Nemean lion skin tied at the front. At the center are exceptional wrap around berried laurel and mirrored Vitruvian scrolls, and striking Greek key designs. The removable lid also displays the same stunning colored cobalt blue Sévres porcelain with a superb richly chased top foliate ormolu finial. — Read Less
- Item # 10330
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H: 17.5 in L: 11.25 in D: 11.25 in
H: 44 cm L: 29 cm D: 29 cm
- France
- 19th Century
- Ormolu, Porcelain
- Louis XVI st. Read More
- Sèvres Read More
It was founded through the support of King Louis XV of France and at the initiative of Madame Pompadour to be located near her Château.
Due to Sèvres’ reputation for excellence and prestige, it has always attracted some of the best artists throughout history; François Boucher, Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse, Étienne Maurice Falconet, Alexandre Fragonard and August Rodin, just to name a few. Many of these artworks can be seen at the Louvre Museum and the Musée National de Céramique in France.
Initially, Sèvres created a soft paste porcelain know as Biscuit de Sèvres. In 1768 the Bordeaux chemist Villaris and Jean Baptiste Darnet discovered deposits of Kaolin on French soil. In 1771 the Royal Academy sent a report on the creation of hard paste porcelain at which time Sèvres began manufacturing hard paste porcelain.
Louis-Simon Boizot (1743–1809) was a French sculptor renowned for creating Biscuit de Sèvres models, and was the director at Sèvres from 1774-1800, followed by Alexandre Brogniart(1800-1847) and Henri Victor Regnault in 1854.
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