Not currently on display at the V&A

Ballerina

Figurine
ca.1920 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This small figurine of a classical ballet dancer was produced in Thuringia, central Germany, probably at the Sitzendorf porcelain factory which began the production of lace 'Dresden style' figurines in 1884, under the chairmanship of Alfred and Carl Wilhelm Voigt. The first porcelain factory in Sitzendorf opened in Thuringia in 1760 but we know that this little dancer was produced after 1891, partly from the style which dates it to the 1920s, and because the mark on the base came into use after 1891. It represents a classical ballet dancer, and there was a renewed interest in classical ballet in Europe in the 1920s since many ballet dancers settled in the west after the 1917 Russian revolution, some of them opening ballet schools.

The use of real lace incorporated in the figurine was a technique popularly used at the Sitzendorf factory in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Sitzendorf Porcelain Manufactory, as it became known after 1902, also made figurines of girl musicians with similar lacy skirts, and white bases decorated with identical flourishes of gold enamel paint. This is one of a pair in the Theatre Collections, showing the dancer in different positions.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleBallerina (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Glazed porcelain and lace
Brief description
Figurine of a ballerina, one of a pair, Thuringian, ca. 1920
Physical description
Small glazed porcelain figurine of a dancer on integral base with her hands crossed in front of her, bending forwards, wearing a machine lace cotton ballet skirt. Underglaze blue, brown and red for facial features, underglaze green for the headband and bodice, overglaze gilt for the shoes, bodice detail, headdress detail and stripes around the base. One of a pair.
Dimensions
  • Height: 8.0cm
  • At widest point width: 6.5cm
  • Of base width: 4.1cm
  • Depth: 2.7cm
Marks and inscriptions
'FOREIGN' (Stamped on base in red.)
Credit line
Richard Vincent Hughes Bequest
Summary
This small figurine of a classical ballet dancer was produced in Thuringia, central Germany, probably at the Sitzendorf porcelain factory which began the production of lace 'Dresden style' figurines in 1884, under the chairmanship of Alfred and Carl Wilhelm Voigt. The first porcelain factory in Sitzendorf opened in Thuringia in 1760 but we know that this little dancer was produced after 1891, partly from the style which dates it to the 1920s, and because the mark on the base came into use after 1891. It represents a classical ballet dancer, and there was a renewed interest in classical ballet in Europe in the 1920s since many ballet dancers settled in the west after the 1917 Russian revolution, some of them opening ballet schools.

The use of real lace incorporated in the figurine was a technique popularly used at the Sitzendorf factory in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Sitzendorf Porcelain Manufactory, as it became known after 1902, also made figurines of girl musicians with similar lacy skirts, and white bases decorated with identical flourishes of gold enamel paint. This is one of a pair in the Theatre Collections, showing the dancer in different positions.
Associated object
S.316-1981 (Object)
Collection
Accession number
S.315-1981

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Record createdSeptember 16, 2005
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