A PORCELAIN PLATE
THE YUSUPOV PORCELAIN MANUFACTORY Prince Nikolai Yusupov (1750-1831), director of the Imperial Porcelain Factory during the reign of Paul I, founded the Yusupov Porcelain Factory in 1814 on his estate in Archangel'skoe outside of Moscow. The factory was more accurately a studio where porcelain blanks from French factories and the Popov factory were painted. The porcelain was never sold, but rather presented to the Imperial family and to the Yusupovs' circle of friends. The plates were painted with roses copied from the three-volume Les Roses published between 1817 and 1824 by the artist and botanist Pierre-Joseph Redouté, who based his studies on the flowers of the best gardens in Paris. The series of rose plates was later rediscovered by Prince Felix Yusupov when he modernised the estate of Archangel'skoe in 1912. PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE COLLECTION
A PORCELAIN PLATE

BY THE YUSUPOV FACTORY, ARCHANGELSKOE, 1826

Details
A PORCELAIN PLATE
BY THE YUSUPOV FACTORY, ARCHANGELSKOE, 1826
Circular, the centre painted with a rose after Redouté and titled 'Rosier à Cent Feuilles', the border with gilt stylised foliate wreath, the reverse with gilt inscription 'Archangelski 1826', marked under base with incised potter's mark; otherwise unmarked
9 in. (23 cm.) diameter
Provenance
Acquired for Crichel, Dorset, by the Hon. Mrs. Marten, OBE, D.L.

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Aleksandra Babenko
Aleksandra Babenko

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