Figure thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 139, The Curtain Foundation Gallery

Figure

ca. 1760-1765 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

During the 18th century dessert was the course on which the greatest effort and expense were lavished. The food served and the fine porcelain which accompanied it reflected the wealth and good taste of the host, however it also provides a stark contrast to the atrocities of the transatlantic slave trade which produced many of the objects and food so hirely desired during this course, such as sugar, spice, glass, porcelain, etc.

This richly decorated figure, in the form of a kneeling black man holding a shell, was probably used for serving dessert items. The shell would have contained dry sweetmeats. This object aestheticizes the exploitation of black people, this is further emphasised by the fact that he is shown in a vulnerable and subservient position, kneeling to the white colonial structures which have imprisoned him. A shocking estimated 75% of all enslaved Africans crossing the Atlantic were destined, at least at the beginning, to work in sugar, this object must be understood within this wider global context of the British Empire and its colonial power structures.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Soft-paste porcelain, painted in enamels and gilded
Brief description
Sweetmeat figure, in soft-paste porcelain painted in enamels and slightly gilded, Derby Porcelain Factory, Derby, ca. 1760-1765. This object aestheticizes the exploitation of black people, this is further emphasised by the fact that the boy is shown in a vulnerable and subservient position.
Physical description
Sweetmeat figure, in soft-paste porcelain, painted in enamels and slightly gilded, formed as a young black man kneeling on one knee and supporting a shell, the interior of which is painted with insects; on a rococo scrolled base
Dimensions
  • Height: 19.6cm
Credit line
Given by Lady Charlotte Schreiber
Object history
One of a pair with 414:187/A-1885 (Sch. I 302A)
The pair was purchased by Lady Charlotte Schreiber from Mrs Haliburton, Richmond, for £12 and ??? shillings in April 1878
Acquired as Chelsea porcelain
Subjects depicted
Summary
During the 18th century dessert was the course on which the greatest effort and expense were lavished. The food served and the fine porcelain which accompanied it reflected the wealth and good taste of the host, however it also provides a stark contrast to the atrocities of the transatlantic slave trade which produced many of the objects and food so hirely desired during this course, such as sugar, spice, glass, porcelain, etc.

This richly decorated figure, in the form of a kneeling black man holding a shell, was probably used for serving dessert items. The shell would have contained dry sweetmeats. This object aestheticizes the exploitation of black people, this is further emphasised by the fact that he is shown in a vulnerable and subservient position, kneeling to the white colonial structures which have imprisoned him. A shocking estimated 75% of all enslaved Africans crossing the Atlantic were destined, at least at the beginning, to work in sugar, this object must be understood within this wider global context of the British Empire and its colonial power structures.
Associated object
Other number
Sch. I 302 - Schreiber number
Collection
Accession number
414:187-1885

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Record createdApril 25, 2006
Record URL
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