AN ORMOLU-MOUNTED VINCENNES, SEVRES AND MEISSEN PORCELAIN POT-POURRI
AN ORMOLU-MOUNTED VINCENNES, SEVRES AND MEISSEN PORCELAIN POT-POURRI

THE PORCELAIN CIRCA 1753-60, THE ORMOLU PREDOMINANTELY CIRCA 1760-70, INCISED BP (?) TO UNDERSIDE OF ONE BIRD, ASSEMBLED BY A MARCHAND-MERCIER

Details
AN ORMOLU-MOUNTED VINCENNES, SEVRES AND MEISSEN PORCELAIN POT-POURRI
THE PORCELAIN CIRCA 1753-60, THE ORMOLU PREDOMINANTELY CIRCA 1760-70, INCISED BP (?) TO UNDERSIDE OF ONE BIRD, ASSEMBLED BY A MARCHAND-MERCIER
Comprising a Sèvres baluster bleu céleste pot-pourri vase painted with landscape vignettes, surmounted by a pierced key-pattern band and an ormolu-mounted domed Sèvres cover, on a scrolling plinth mounted with a central Meissen panel, flanked by two Vincennes birds enriched in bleu céleste and gilding before branches issuing blue and white flowers
11.1/8 in. (28.3 cm.) high; 12 in. (30.5 cm.) wide overall
Provenance
Almost certainly acquired by Charles William Vane, 3rd Marquess of Londonderry (1778-1854) or
Frances Anne, Marchioness of Londonderry (1800-65), possibly whilst travelling through Paris in 1819, en route to Vienna.
Literature
Londonderry House inventory, 1886, p. 57, yellow drawing room, ‘sevres china turquoise blue inkstand mounted in ormolu & cover’.
A.Oswald, ‘Great London Mansions, Londonderry House Park Lane…’, Country Life, 10 July 1937, p. 39, fig 3, illustrated in the yellow drawing room.
H. Montgomery Hyde, Londonderry House and its Pictures, London, 1937, pl. XIV.
Londonderry House inventory, 1939, p. 69, yellow drawing room.

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Katharine Cooke
Katharine Cooke

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Lot Essay

Vincennes models of birds were inspired by the Meissen examples modelled by J.J. Kändler who in turn was copying earlier Chinese and Japanese models. The first recorded sale of individual Vincennes birds ‘2 petites perrches’ was noted on 23 October 1749; these were acquired by the marchand-mercier Lazare Duvaux for 30 livres and sold to monsieur de Villaumont. Marchand-merciers such as Duvaux incorporated Vincennes birds into decorative or functional objects such as girandoles, pot-pourri vases and inkstands. Several are recorded in his Livre-Journal, including : ‘Mme la Marq. De Pompadour: Une paire de girandoles à deux branches à feuillages et terraces dorés d’or moulu sur des oiseaux de Vincennes bleu et or, les fleurs même porcelaine assorties, 360 livres.’ See the pair of Vincennes bleu lapis-ground ormolu-mounted pot-pourri vases mounted on lacquered stands with Vincennes birds, sold from the collection of Léon Levy, Sotheby’s Paris, 2 October 2008, lot 28 (78,750 euros), which are now in the Belvedere Collection, illustrated by Joanna Gwilt, Vincennes and Early Sèvres Porcelain from the Belvedere Collection, London, 2014, p. 239, nos. 174 and 175.

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