Figure Group
1766-1767 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
The man and boy here have clothing and hairstyles that are intended as East Asian but which to Asian eyes may appear closer to European fancy dress. The man’s feathered hat is a recurrent motif in European chinoiserie figures from other factories, such as Meissen and Frankenthal, and in prints after such mid-eighteenth-century French artists as François Boucher and Jean-Baptiste Pillement.
Like all the porcelain factories founded in the German states of the Holy Roman Empire in the 1750s and 1760s, the one at Ludwigsburg relied on industrial secrets stolen from Meissen and spread from one part of the empire to another, chiefly by a kiln technician from Vienna, J.J. Ringler. This man was appointed director at Ludwigsburg in 1758-1759, having previously been at Höchst, Strasbourg and Nymphenburg; it was as a result of his involvement at these factories that knowledge of Meissen’s materials and processes spread to Berlin, Frankenthal, Fürstenberg and elsewhere. Like all the smaller German factories, Ludwigsburg (founded 1758) relied on the patronage of the prince or elector of the state in which it was located: in the case of Ludwigsburg, this was the Duke of Württemberg. Ludwigsburg porcelain has a distinctive greyish tone, clearly visible here.
The incised mark ‘Elbs’ records the name of the workman (confusingly known as a ‘repairer’) who assembled the inkstand from its separately formed component parts, most of which would have been made by pressing clay into plaster moulds.
Like all the porcelain factories founded in the German states of the Holy Roman Empire in the 1750s and 1760s, the one at Ludwigsburg relied on industrial secrets stolen from Meissen and spread from one part of the empire to another, chiefly by a kiln technician from Vienna, J.J. Ringler. This man was appointed director at Ludwigsburg in 1758-1759, having previously been at Höchst, Strasbourg and Nymphenburg; it was as a result of his involvement at these factories that knowledge of Meissen’s materials and processes spread to Berlin, Frankenthal, Fürstenberg and elsewhere. Like all the smaller German factories, Ludwigsburg (founded 1758) relied on the patronage of the prince or elector of the state in which it was located: in the case of Ludwigsburg, this was the Duke of Württemberg. Ludwigsburg porcelain has a distinctive greyish tone, clearly visible here.
The incised mark ‘Elbs’ records the name of the workman (confusingly known as a ‘repairer’) who assembled the inkstand from its separately formed component parts, most of which would have been made by pressing clay into plaster moulds.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Hard-paste porcelain painted with enamels and gilded |
Brief description | Figure group of Chinese figures in hard-paste porcelain painted with enamels and gilded, modelled by J.A. Weinmüller, Ludwigsburg porcelain factory, Ludwigsburg, 1766-1767. |
Physical description | Figure group of Chinese figures in hard-paste porcelain painted with enamels and gilded. A Chinese man in a conical hat leans upon a large coffee pot, and a cup of coffee on a plate is presented to him by a kneeling boy. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | 'Elbs' [indistinct] (Workman's mark, incised) |
Credit line | Purchased with funds from the bequest of Captain H.B. Murray |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | The man and boy here have clothing and hairstyles that are intended as East Asian but which to Asian eyes may appear closer to European fancy dress. The man’s feathered hat is a recurrent motif in European chinoiserie figures from other factories, such as Meissen and Frankenthal, and in prints after such mid-eighteenth-century French artists as François Boucher and Jean-Baptiste Pillement. Like all the porcelain factories founded in the German states of the Holy Roman Empire in the 1750s and 1760s, the one at Ludwigsburg relied on industrial secrets stolen from Meissen and spread from one part of the empire to another, chiefly by a kiln technician from Vienna, J.J. Ringler. This man was appointed director at Ludwigsburg in 1758-1759, having previously been at Höchst, Strasbourg and Nymphenburg; it was as a result of his involvement at these factories that knowledge of Meissen’s materials and processes spread to Berlin, Frankenthal, Fürstenberg and elsewhere. Like all the smaller German factories, Ludwigsburg (founded 1758) relied on the patronage of the prince or elector of the state in which it was located: in the case of Ludwigsburg, this was the Duke of Württemberg. Ludwigsburg porcelain has a distinctive greyish tone, clearly visible here. The incised mark ‘Elbs’ records the name of the workman (confusingly known as a ‘repairer’) who assembled the inkstand from its separately formed component parts, most of which would have been made by pressing clay into plaster moulds. |
Bibliographic reference | Passion for Porcelain: masterpieces of ceramics from the British Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum.
pp.278-279 |
Collection | |
Accession number | C.740-1923 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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