A SEVRES BLEU CELESTE FOOTED ICE-CUP STAND FROM THE CHEREMETEFF SERVICE (SOUCOUPE 'A PIED')
A SEVRES BLEU CELESTE FOOTED ICE-CUP STAND FROM THE CHEREMETEFF SERVICE (SOUCOUPE 'A PIED')

BLUE INTERLACED L'S, DATE LETTERS KK FOR 1787 AT THE LEFT, PAINTER'S MARK FOR BOUILLAT PÈRE

Details
A SEVRES BLEU CELESTE FOOTED ICE-CUP STAND FROM THE CHEREMETEFF SERVICE (SOUCOUPE 'A PIED')
BLUE INTERLACED L'S, DATE LETTERS KK FOR 1787 AT THE LEFT, PAINTER'S MARK FOR BOUILLAT PÈRE
Painted with fruit and flowers reserved within in a chased gilt band on the turquoise ground, further gilt with a wide band of interlaced foliate scrolls suspending leafy garlands, gilt line rim
8¾ in. (22.2 cm.) diameter

Lot Essay

Monsieur Edmé-Françoise Bouillat, painter at Sèvres from 1758-1810. Recorded as a flower painter.

Designed to hold ice-cups (tasse à glace)in a formal dessert service, the present soucoupe à pied is part of a service later acquired by the Chérémèteff family in Russia. A large part of the service, of which most pieces are dated between 1788 and 1791, is illustrated in 'Les Porcelainiers du 18ème siècle français',Connaissance des Arts, Paris, 1964, pp. 223-4.

Four seau à bouteilles of 1788 are in the collection at Waddesdon Manor of which one is illustrated by Sir Geoffrey de Bellaigue, The Louis XVI Service, London, 1986, p. 27, fig. 18. Three plates have appeared recently at auction (The Collection of Charles-Otto Zieseniss; Christie's, Paris, 6 December 2001, lot 183 and anon. sale; Sotheby's London, 25 November 1997, lot 24) as have two tasses à glace (European Ceramics including The Pompey Collection; Christie's, New York, 23 May 2002, lot 4).

The Chérémèteff family was at the height of its power and influence during the reign of Catherine the Great when family members held high office in the army, navy and diplomatic corps. Highlights from the family's collection of bleu celeste Sèvres, including a set of ornithological plates acquired by New England collectors and sold Christie's New York, 5 May 1999, lot 51, were exhibited in London in 1906 at the (Asher) Westheimer Gallery, New Bond Street. See "The Chérémèteff Sèvres Porcelain", The Connoisseur, XV, August 1906, pp. 243-448.

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