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

Plate

ca. 1790-1820 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Plate of hard-paste porcelain painted with blue and purple enamels and gilded. Decorated with a nymph bathing her feet in a medallion in the middle, imitating a classical cameo. The rim is edged on the inner side with a gilt wreath, and on the outer with a blue shell border.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Hard-paste porcelain painted with blue and purple enamels and gilded
Brief description
Plate of hard-paste porcelain, Doccia porcelain factory, Doccia, 1790-1820
Physical description
Plate of hard-paste porcelain painted with blue and purple enamels and gilded. Decorated with a nymph bathing her feet in a medallion in the middle, imitating a classical cameo. The rim is edged on the inner side with a gilt wreath, and on the outer with a blue shell border.
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 26.4cm
Gallery label
Plate Porcelain ITALY (DOCCIA); late 18th century J. C. Joicey Bequest C.1740-1919 (Label draft attributed to John V. G. Mallet, ca. 1995)(ca. 1995)
Credit line
Bequeathed by Mr John George Joicey
Subjects depicted
Bibliographic reference
Frescobaldi Malenchini, Livia ed. With Balleri, Rita and Rucellai, Oliva, ‘Amici di Doccia Quaderni, Numero VII, 2013, The Victoria and Albert Museum Collection’, Edizioni Polistampa, Firenze, 2014 p. 113, Cat. 104 104. Plate with a cameo and flowering vines circa 1790-1820 hard-paste porcelain with a tin-glaze painted in colours and gold diam. 23,5 cm no mark inv. C.1740-1919 bequest: Mr John George Joicey The plate, which has a cameo with a figure painted in grey on a violet ground in the centre, is decorated with a ring of gold flowering vines; along the lobed rim there is a saw-tooth border in blue inside of a gold edge. This type of decoration can be assigned to the period when the factory first came under the direction of Carlo Leopoldo Ginori Lisci (1792-1837). The use of a tin-glaze on the plate shows that the clay type can be identified as masso bastardo (see cat. 63, 103). The plate was part of a major donation made by John George Joicey to the Victoria & Albert Museum (inv. C.1240- C.1776). A. d’A. Bibliography: unpublished
Collection
Accession number
C.1740-1919

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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