Design
ca.1810 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Pierre Louis Dagoty's porcelain was characterised by the use of vivid colours and the thick application of burnished gold leaf. He borrowed from Neoclassical ornament but his designs also included Egyptian and Chinoiseries motifs.
Dagoty's elegant wares won him the patronage of Empress Joséphine. At the height of production, in 1807, he employed over a hundred workers, and exported his porcelain to Russia. After the fall of the Empire, manufacture continued under the protection of the Duchesse d'Angloulême, the only surviving child of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette.
Between 1816 and 1820, Dagoty worked in partnership with François Maurice Honoré. In 1817, Dagoty and Honoré received a commission from President James Monroe of the United States for a dinner service and matching dessert service.
Dagoty's elegant wares won him the patronage of Empress Joséphine. At the height of production, in 1807, he employed over a hundred workers, and exported his porcelain to Russia. After the fall of the Empire, manufacture continued under the protection of the Duchesse d'Angloulême, the only surviving child of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette.
Between 1816 and 1820, Dagoty worked in partnership with François Maurice Honoré. In 1817, Dagoty and Honoré received a commission from President James Monroe of the United States for a dinner service and matching dessert service.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Pencil & gouache |
Brief description | Design for a decorative cup/vase by Dagoty, ca.1810. |
Physical description | Design for decorative cup, with violet ground, and with handle lined with gold; decorated with a motif of stylised palms ('palmettes'). |
Dimensions |
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Summary | Pierre Louis Dagoty's porcelain was characterised by the use of vivid colours and the thick application of burnished gold leaf. He borrowed from Neoclassical ornament but his designs also included Egyptian and Chinoiseries motifs. Dagoty's elegant wares won him the patronage of Empress Joséphine. At the height of production, in 1807, he employed over a hundred workers, and exported his porcelain to Russia. After the fall of the Empire, manufacture continued under the protection of the Duchesse d'Angloulême, the only surviving child of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. Between 1816 and 1820, Dagoty worked in partnership with François Maurice Honoré. In 1817, Dagoty and Honoré received a commission from President James Monroe of the United States for a dinner service and matching dessert service. |
Bibliographic reference | Dagoty á Paris: La manufacture de porcelaine de l'impératrice, by Régine de Plinval de Guillebon
(Paris: Éditions Somogy d'Art, 2006). |
Collection | |
Accession number | 3234:11 |
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Record created | June 10, 2009 |
Record URL |
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