Coffee pot c.1774-1814
Hard-paste porcelain | 15.8 x 13.3 x 9.0 cm (whole object) | RCIN 39866
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A Marcolini period Meissen hard-paste porcelain covered coffee pot of baluster form with naturalistic polychrome flowers painted on white glaze. The cap like cover (chipped) has a rosebud finial. The loop handle, which is moulded, takes the form of a twisted branches. It is all finished with a puce edge.
Throughout the nineteenth century, florally decorated porcelain continued to be produced. The factory at Meissen, established in 1708 under the state control of the Electors of Saxony, continued to produce shapes and decoration which had been popular a century earlier. A composite tea service in the Royal Collection dates from the Marcolini period of the Meissen factory, between 1796 and 1814. It was purchased several decades after this by Alexandra, Princess of Wales, later Queen Alexandra, and placed on display in Marlborough House, the London home of the Prince and Princess of Wales. The garden flowers of roses, wallflowers, sweet peas and daisies, painted in loose bouquets, would have appealed to Alexandra’s taste in interior decoration; her boudoir at Marlborough House was home to a profusion of plants and porcelain, in common with many of the more public spaces.
Text adapted from Painting Paradise: The Art of the Garden, London, 2015.Provenance
Part of a similarly decorated cabaret service first recorded in the Royal Collection in 1877; acquired by Queen Alexandra
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Creator(s)
(porcelain manufacturer)Acquirer(s)
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Medium and techniques
Hard-paste porcelain
Measurements
15.8 x 13.3 x 9.0 cm (whole object)
Place of Production
Saxony [Germany]