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Probably Chelsea Porcelain Works [London] (c. 1745-69)

Etui 1750-70

Porcelain, gold | 8.7 x 2.3 cm (whole object) | RCIN 4472

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  • Porcelain étui in the form of a bunch of flowers, the body ridged and glazed in several shades of green to represent stalks and painted with leaves, the cover modelled as lilies and roses, with gold rim mounts chased with foliage.

    Objects of this type were typically purchased in English toyshops of the period. A bill to Frederick, Prince of Wales, from the shop of Paul Bertrand of October 1738 included not only eight snuff boxes in various materials, but also two etuis, two pocket books, a toothpick case, a gold ‘smelling bottle’ and an onyx egg. The Prince paid £21 for a single etui, and a protective outer case for one of these items cost as much as ten guineas. An etui was a small case to contain implements for writing, manicure or sewing, and so-named after the French word estuier meaning to keep. The bill from Bertrand shows that the items contained within an etui were sold separately – the Prince paid £5 15s 6d for ‘trincketts’ for his bloodstone example, together with a set of five chains to suspend it from a belt.
     
    Bertrand’s bill makes clear that these luxury scent bottle cases and etuis came in a range of materials and decorative finishes – Frederick bought not only ‘an inlay’d estwey’ but also versions in bloodstone and carnelian. They were also made in fashionable English porcelain. RCIN 4472 is probably the work of the Chelsea porcelain factory. A very similar etui with almost identical decoration and mounts by Charles Gouyn is in the Cognacq-Jay collection, Paris (J.600), and another is in the V&A (120-1864).

    Text adapted from The First Georgians: Art and Monarchy 1714 - 1760, London, 2014
    Provenance

    Acquired by Queen Mary

  • Medium and techniques

    Porcelain, gold

    Measurements

    8.7 x 2.3 cm (whole object)

  • Alternative title(s)

    Needlecase


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