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{{Short description|Porcelain manufactory in London, England}} |
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[[File:Dogs — Chelseaporcfactory.jpg|thumb|Dogs, about 1749, Chelsea Porcelain factory ([[Victoria and Albert Museum|V&A Museum]]) no. C.246A-1976]] |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2015}} |
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{{Use British English|date=August 2015}} |
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[[File:The Music Lesson MET DP-14272-001 (cropped).jpg|thumb|''The Music Lesson'', gold anchor, c. 1765, with [[bocage]] background. 15 3/8 × 12 1/4 × 8 3/4 inches, 22 lb. (39.1 × 31.1 × 22.2 cm, 10 kg). An example was sold for £8 in 1770;<ref>Honey, 60</ref> [[:File:La leçon de musique (V&A Museum) (12049460964).jpg|different version, different angle]].]] |
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'''Chelsea porcelain''' is the [[porcelain]] made by the '''Chelsea porcelain manufactory''', the first important porcelain manufactory in England, established around 1743–45, and operating independently until 1770, when it was merged with [[Derby porcelain]].<ref>The [[Bow porcelain factory|Bow factory]] was granted a patent in 1744 but no examples of its wares predating the first works of Chelsea porcelain are known.</ref> It made [[soft-paste porcelain]] throughout its history, though there were several changes in the "body" material and [[ceramic glaze|glaze]] used. Its wares were aimed at a luxury market, and its site in [[Chelsea, London|Chelsea]], London, was close to the fashionable [[Ranelagh Gardens]] pleasure ground, opened in 1742.<ref>Spero, 118</ref> |
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The first known wares are the "goat and bee" cream jugs with seated goats at the base, some examples of which are incised with "Chelsea", "1745" and a triangle.<ref>Honey, 16</ref> The entrepreneurial director, at least from 1750, was Nicholas Sprimont, a [[Huguenot]] silversmith in [[Soho]], but few private documents survive to aid a picture of the factory's history.<ref>Honey, 17–24</ref> Early tablewares, being produced in profusion by 1750, depend on [[Meissen porcelain]] models and on silverware prototypes, such as salt cellars in the form of realistic shells. |
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Chelsea was known for its figures. From about 1760 its inspiration was drawn more from [[Sèvres porcelain]] than Meissen. |
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Chelsea was known for its figures, initially mostly single standing figures of the ''[[Street cries|Cries of London]]'' and other subjects. Many of these were very small by European standards, from about {{convert|2+1/2|to|3+1/2|inch|cm|0}} high, overlapping with the category of "Chelsea Toys", for which the factory was famous in the 1750s and 1760s. These were very small pieces which often had metal mounts and were functional as [[bonbonnière]]s (little boxes), [[perfume|scent bottles]], [[needlecase]]s, [[étui]]s, [[thimble]]s and small seals, many with inscriptions in French,<ref>Spero, 120; Honey, 76–80</ref> "almost invariably amorous suggestions",<ref>Honey, 78–80</ref> but often misspelled.<ref>Honey, 76–78</ref> |
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In 1769 the manufactory was purchased by [[William Duesbury]], owner of the [[Royal Crown Derby|Derby porcelain factory]], and the wares are indistinguishable during the "Chelsea-Derby period" that lasted until 1784, when the Chelsea factory was demolished and its moulds, patterns and many of its workmen and artists transferred to Derby. |
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From about 1760, its inspiration was drawn more from [[Sèvres porcelain]] than Meissen, making grand [[garniture]]s of vases and elaborate large groups with seated couples in front of a [[bocage]] screen of flowering plants, all on a raised base of [[Rococo]] [[scrollwork]]. As with other English factories, much of the sales came from public auctions, held about once a year; copies of the catalogues for 1755, 1756 and (in part) 1761 are very useful to scholars.<ref>Lippert, 57–58</ref> |
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The factory history can be divided into four main periods, named for the identifying marks under the wares: |
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In 1770, the manufactory was purchased by [[William Duesbury]], owner of the [[Royal Crown Derby|Derby porcelain factory]], and the wares are indistinguishable during the "Chelsea-Derby period" that lasted until 1784,<ref>Or at least, distinguished with great uncertainty and difficulty. See Honey, 144–152.</ref> when the Chelsea factory was demolished and its moulds, patterns and many of its workmen and artists transferred to Derby.<ref>Lippert, 58</ref> |
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[[File:Plate, Chelsea Factory, London, c. 1755, soft-paste porcelain - Montreal Museum of Fine Arts - Montreal, Canada - DSC09210.jpg|thumb|Plate, c. 1755, with three vignette scenes from ''[[Aesop's Fables]]'']] |
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==Periods by marks== |
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== Triangle period (around 1743-1749) == |
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[[File:Botanical plate with spray of fruiting Indian Bean Tree MET DP-1687-038 (cropped).jpg|thumb|"Botanical" red anchor plate with spray of fruiting [[Indian bean tree]], c. 1755]] |
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These early products bore an incised [[triangle]] mark. Most of the [[wares]] were white and were strongly influenced by [[silver]] design. The most notable products of this era were white saltcellars in the shape of [[crayfish]]. Perhaps the most famous pieces are the ''Goat and Bee'' [[Jug (container)|jugs]] in 1747 that were also based on a silver model. Copies of these were made at [[Coalport]] in the 19th century. |
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The factory history, before the merger with Derby, can be divided into four main periods, named for the identifying marks under the wares, although the changes in marks do not exactly coincide with changes in materials or style. Some pieces are unmarked in all periods, and there appears to be some overlapping of marks; indeed some pieces have two different marks. There are also anchor marks in blue and brown,<ref>Lippert, 58, note 1; Austin, 1–3 (including a good set of photos); Honey, 384–385, with drawings.</ref> and an extremely rare "crown and trident" mark in underglaze blue, known on only about 20 pieces, and thought to date from around 1749. A chipped beaker with this mark fetched £37,000 at auction in 2015.<ref>[https://www.antiquestradegazette.com/news/2015/37000-clue-to-another-side-of-chelsea/ "£37,000 clue to another side of Chelsea"], by Roland Arkell, 10 Mar 2015, ''Antiques Trade Gazette''; Austin, 2</ref> |
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Although the first three examples shown here are from the underside of the bases of pieces, where most porcelain factory marks are placed, the very small Chelsea anchor marks are often "tucked away in the most unexpected places".<ref>Honey, 34 note 8</ref> In the group of Chinese musicians, the tiny red anchor mark is visible on the raised base at ankle level, between the woman with the [[tambourine]] and the boy.<ref>[https://images.metmuseum.org/CRDImages/es/original/DP-12587-011.jpg Metropolitan photo]</ref> |
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== Raised anchor period (1749-1752) == |
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<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px"> |
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In this period, the paste and glaze were modified to produce a clear, white, slightly [[Opacity (optics)|opaque]] surface on which to paint. The influence of [[Meissen porcelain|Meissen, Germany]] is evident in the classical figures among Italianate ruins and harbour scenes and adaptations from [[Francis Barlow (artist)|Francis Barlow's]] edition of ''[[Aesop's Fables]]''. In 1751, copies were made of two Meissen services. Chelsea also made figures, [[birds]] and animals inspired by Meissen originals. Flowers and landscapes were copied from [[Vincennes porcelain|Vincennes]]. |
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File:Goat and Bee jug. Undersida med stämpel - Hallwylska museet - 87063.tif|Incised triangle |
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File:Botanical plate with a tropical specimen MET LC-2016 218-002.jpg|Red anchor |
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File:Teapot stand MET DP-12529-023 (cropped).jpg|Gold anchor |
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File:Chinese musicians MET DP-12587-011 (cropped to show mark).jpg|Red anchor (near top) from the group of Chinese musicians (shown below) |
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</gallery> |
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=== Triangle period (around 1743–1749) === |
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These early products bore an incised [[triangle]] mark. Most of the wares were white and were strongly influenced by silverware designs.<ref>Spero, 118</ref> The early body was "a very translucent material, resembling milk-white glass",<ref>Honey, 20</ref> later changing "to a harder and rather colder-looking material".<ref>Honey, 24</ref> [[Slipcasting]] rather than pressing paste into the moulds was introduced during this period, and remained usual for Chelsea figures.<ref>Lippert, 58</ref> |
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The most notable products of this era were white saltcellars in the shape of [[crayfish]]. Perhaps the most famous pieces are the ''Goat and Bee'' [[Jug (container)|jugs]] that were also based on a silver model. Copies of these were made by [[Coalport porcelain]] in the 19th century. Sales were suspended in March 1749, which appears to be when Sprimont took control, and the factory was moved a short distance within Chelsea.<ref>Spero, 118</ref> |
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=== Raised anchor period (1749–1752) === |
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[[File:Pair of cuckoos MET SF64 101 424,425 img1 (cropped).jpg|thumb|Pair of [[cuckoo]]s, c. 1750, {{convert|8|in|cm|abbr=on}} high, raised anchor mark<ref>They seem to be two males of ''[[Clamator Glandarius]]'', not to be seen in England; [[:File:Clamator glandarius.jpg|Bird guide illustration]]</ref>]] |
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On 9 January 1750 Sprimont advertised the reopening of the factory, with "a great Variety of Pieces for Ornament in a Taste entirely new", and the new mark is assumed to celebrate this.<ref>Spero, 118</ref> The factory was very close to the [[Thames]], and the anchor is a symbol of hope, and of Saint [[Nicolas of Myra]], patron saint of seamen, after whom Sprimont was perhaps named.<ref>Lippert, 58</ref> |
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The next six or so years were the most successful for the factory.<ref>Spero, 118</ref> In this period, the paste and glaze were modified to produce a clear, white, slightly [[Opacity (optics)|opaque]] surface on which to paint. The influence of Meissen is evident in the classical figures among Italianate ruins and harbour scenes and adaptations from [[Francis Barlow (artist)|Francis Barlow's]] edition of ''[[Aesop's Fables]]''.<ref>Austin, 3–4</ref> In 1751, copies were made of two Meissen services. Chelsea also made figures, [[birds]] and animals inspired by Meissen originals. Flowers and landscapes were copied from [[Vincennes porcelain]] (soon to move to Sèvres). A set of figures of pairs of birds were evidently based on the illustrations to ''A Natural History of Uncommon Birds'', by [[George Edwards (naturalist)|George Edwards]], published in four volumes from 1743 to 1751. The copies used were probably with uncoloured illustrations, as though the forms follow the illustrations well, the colouring of the figures is often eccentric and inaccurate.<ref>Austin, 4; Honey, 52–54</ref> |
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=== Red anchor period (1752–1756) === |
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[[File:Basket of fruit MET DP-470-069 (cropped).jpg|thumb|A "Chelsea Toy" in the form of a basket of fruit, width 2 3/4 inches (4.1 × 7 cm), c. 1755, inscribed "MON AMOUR LES A CUEILLI POUR VOUS" ("my love gathered these for you").]] |
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As at Meissen and [[Chantilly porcelain|Chantilly]] some time earlier, imitations of [[Japanese export porcelain]] in the [[Kakiemon]] style were popular from the late 1740s until around 1758. These were copied both from the Continental imitations and Japanese originals, and some apparently freshly created in the style.<ref>Austin, 5</ref> |
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Some [[tableware]] was decorated with bold and botanically accurate paintings of plants, known as "botanical" pieces, which essentially take onto porcelain the style of the large botanical book illustrations that were beginning to be produced, and often hand-coloured. The factory was very close to the [[Chelsea Physic Garden]] (founded 1673 and still open on the same site), which may have influenced the approach, and at least provided illustrated books as models. Some pieces were copied from various books, including those by [[Philip Miller]], the director of the gardens (the eighth edition of ''The Gardener's Dictionary'' (1752) and ''Figures of Plants'', vol 1, 1755) and [[Georg Dionysius Ehret]]. An advertisement in 1758 offered "Table Plates, Soup Plates, and Desart Plates enamelled from the [[Hans Sloane]]'s Plants" (Sloane had set up the garden's current site in 1722).<ref>Spero, 120; Austin, 5–6</ref> |
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These innovative pieces exerted a long-lasting influence on porcelain design, especially in Britain,<ref>Honey, 44</ref> and similar styles have seen a strong revival from the late 20th century, led by [[Portmeirion Pottery]]'s "Botanic Garden" range, launched in 1972, using designs adapted from Thomas Green's ''Universal or-Botanical, Medical and Agricultural Dictionary'' (1817). |
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The small "Toys", which become prominent in this period, may have been copied from the elusive "Girl-in-a Swing" factory, now usually located at [[St James's]], an even more fashionable location in the [[West End of London]], which was active about 1751–54. This seems to have been connected to the Chelsea factory in some way.<ref>Lippert, 58, note 6 (whose dates are used); Honey, 30–32, 76; Spero, 120; [https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/collection/search#/2/collection/4505/flask Royal Collection, Flask "probably "Girl-in-a Swing""]</ref> Another development was [[tureen]]s and sometimes other large forms in the shapes of animals, birds or plants.<ref>Spero, 120</ref> |
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Examples of fairly exact copying of Meissen wares are the "Monkey Band" (''Affenkapelle'' or "ape orchestra" in German), a group of ten figures of monkey musicians, and a larger excited conductor, all in fancy contemporary costumes. Such [[singerie]]s were popular in various media.<ref>Honey, 52; Austin, 6–7, 132–140</ref> |
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=== Gold anchor period (1756–1769) === |
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[[File:Vase (one of a pair) MET DP-13079-018 (cropped).jpg|thumb|Pair of vases, c. 1762, in a Sèvres style. The main scenes derive from paintings by [[François Boucher]], via prints. Ht: {{convert|23|in|cm|abbr=on}}]] |
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The influence of [[Manufacture nationale de Sèvres|Sèvres]] was very strong and French taste was in the ascendancy. Although many existing types continued to be produced, the gold anchor period saw rich coloured grounds, lavish gilding and the nervous energy of the [[Rococo]] style. As had been the case with imitations of Meissen Kakiemon, Chelsea began to imitate the Sèvres Rococo style just as Sèvres itself was abandoning it for more restrained shapes and decoration.<ref>Lappet, 57; Spero, 120</ref> Chelsea [[garniture]]s of vases became very large and elaborate, some with as many as seven pieces in diminishing sizes. The body now included [[bone ash]], and a wider range of colours was used, as well as lavish [[gilding]].<ref>Spero, 120</ref> The glaze now had a tendency to drip and pool, as well as crazing, and had a slight greenish tint.<ref>Lappet, 57</ref> |
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In 1763, George III and [[Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz|Queen Charlotte]] sent the queen's brother [[Adolphus Frederick IV, Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz]] a large Chelsea service. This commissioning of porcelain for diplomatic gifts was common among the ruler-owned European factories (and indeed in East Asia), but novel for England. The service was praised by [[Horace Walpole]], who said it cost £1,200, and is now mostly in the [[Royal Collection]], who have 137 pieces.<ref>Honey, 66–68; [https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/collection/5000031/the-mecklenburg-dinner-and-dessert-service Royal Collection]</ref> |
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East Asian styles had returned in the red anchor period in the form of versions of Japanese [[Imari ware]], but are more common with the gold anchor. These were to remain an English favourite, especially associated with later [[Crown Derby]], and versions are still made today. According to at least one English authority the first Chelsea versions "greatly surpass in beauty their dull originals".<ref>Honey, 68–70, 68 quoted</ref> |
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Evidence suggests that production was low from 1763, perhaps because Sprimont wished to retire. A sale in 1763 included at least some moulds and premises, as well as household furniture of Sprimont. No dedicated sale was then held until 1769, when moulds were offered again.<ref>Honey, 56</ref> |
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In August 1769, the factory was sold by Sprimont, whose health had been bad, and the next year it was purchased by William Duesbury of [[Royal Crown Derby|Derby porcelain]] who ran it until 1784; Sprimont sold the factory in August 1769 to a James Cox. Duesbury and his partner John Heath bought it in February 1770.<ref>Lippert, 58; Spero, 120, 128; Honey, 56–58</ref> The factory continued to operate in Chelsea but during this time the Chelsea wares are indistinguishable from Duesbury's Derby wares and the period is usually termed "Chelsea-Derby". A final Chelsea sale (at [[Christie's]]) began on 14 February 1770.<ref>Honey, 56–58</ref> |
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==Management and artists== |
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[[File:Beacon and saucer, two fables, (saucer), Chelsea, painted by Jefferyes Hamett O'Neale, c. 1752, soft-paste porcelain - California Palace of the Legion of Honor - DSC07604.JPG|thumb|Saucer with fable by the "Chelsea Fable Painter", perhaps Jefferyes Hamett O'Neale, c. 1752]] |
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The silversmith Nicholas Sprimont (1716–1771), who came from [[Liège]] in modern Belgium, was the usual public face of the factory, but there were other main figures, and the precise roles of all of them are uncertain. Charles Gouyn or Gouyon (before 1737–1782) was another London Huguenot silversmith, and also a dealer in porcelain, who was involved in the early years, but whose role is obscure. He has been suggested as being "concerned with the technical part of the manufacture", or as providing the finance, and acting as a major buyer or distributor of wares. By 1749 or 1750 there may have been a rift between the two.<ref>Honey, 16–18, 18 quoted; Lippert, 57</ref> Gouyn may have founded the "Girl-in-a-Swing" factory or [[St James's factory]], named after the fashionable street where he had a shop.<ref>[https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/collection/search#/6/collection/4483/etui Royal Collection page on an etui]</ref> |
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Any porcelain factory needed an "arcanist", or chemist who could devise the formulae for the body paste, glaze, and colours, and specify the firing variables. It is not clear who this was at Chelsea; a paper in the [[British Museum]] believed to be by Sprimont speaks of having "a casual acquaintance with a chymist who had some knowledge that way", who influenced him to start the factory. Gouyn is one suggestion; another is a Thomas Bryand or Briand, who in 1743 showed the [[Royal Society]] examples of porcelain. By 1746 he was living in [[Staffordshire]], establishing a business partnership, self-described as a painter who "had found out ye art of making an Earthenware Little inferior to Porcelain or China Ware"; but he seems to have died the following year.<ref>Honey, 18–20; Lippert, 57</ref> |
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Large payments to the factory are recorded in 1746 to 1748 from Sir Everard Fawkener, secretary to the king's third son, [[Prince William, Duke of Cumberland]], who had put down the [[Jacobite rising of 1745]]. It is not clear if these were on behalf of the prince or from Fawkener's own funds, or the exact nature of what seems to have been a financing operation. Whereas royal investment in porcelain manufacturing was very common in Europe, it would have been unprecedented in England. A five inch high portrait head of the prince was produced, which was an unusual departure from Chelsea's normal wares. In 1751 a letter says that Fawkener borrowed some Meissen pieces to be copied in Chelsea, and was described as "concerned in the manufacture of China at Chelsea", while the same writer adds "I find that the Duke is a great encourager of the Chelsea China". A worker at the factory believed that Fawkener and Cumberland were the first owners, who employed Sprimont at a guinea a day. Fawkener died in 1758, in some financial difficulties, and at this point Sprimont may have finally become the full owner.<ref>Lippert, 57; Honey, 40, 54; [[:File:William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland (1721–1765) MET 209985.jpg|Head of Cumberland]]</ref> |
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[[File:Saucers (12) (part of a service) MET DP-12529-034.jpg|thumb|Part of a gold anchor tea service, c. 1758–59. The black and gold palette imitates Asian [[lacquer]].]] |
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Sprimont is generally regarded as the guiding hand of the tableware shapes, which made heavy use of metal precedents. Few of the many artists involved are known. The main modeller of figures was the Flemish sculptor Joseph Willems, at Chelsea from about 1749 to 1766, when he left for the factory at [[Tournai]]. The miniature painter Jefferyes Hamett O'Neale has been identified as the "Chelsea Fable Painter", though not without objections; he later signed pieces of [[Worcester porcelain]], though probably working in London. W.B. Honey felt the signed Worcester pieces were too crude to be by the hand of the "Chelsea Fable Painter", though more recent writers accept the identification.<ref>Honey, 13, 42, 268; Lippert, 57; Spero, 119</ref> |
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The leading sculptor [[Louis-François Roubiliac]], French but working in London, was long believed to have modelled many figures, which were additionally marked with an impressed "R", but it seems that this mark means something else, and it is likely that there were at most only a handful of instances of models by him. Sprimont was the godfather of one of his daughters.<ref>Honey, 34, 60. The "Music Lesson" illustrated at top is one of the "R"-marked pieces.</ref> One Chelsea figure certainly based on his work is the reclining portrait of the painter [[William Hogarth]]'s [[pug (dog)|pug dog]] called [[Trump (dog)|Trump]]. Roubiliac sculpted Trump in [[terracotta]] in about 1741, to accompany a bust of Hogarth. The figure appeared in Chelsea porcelain some years later, and then in [[Josiah Wedgwood]]'s Black Basalt ware after he bought a cast of the terracotta in 1774.<ref>[https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O77828/hogarths-dog-trump-figure-roubiliac-louis-francois/ Chelsea figure, V&A]</ref> A portrait bust of [[Frederick, Prince of Wales]] also appears close to Roubiliac's style.<ref>Honey, 34</ref> |
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[[William Duesbury]], who bought the factory in 1770, had been a painter of Chelsea and other wares at his own London workshop, which is documented by an account book of his covering 1751 to 1753 which has survived. However, no Chelsea pieces by his workshop can be securely identified.<ref>Honey, 13</ref> The books record many figures of birds in particular.<ref>Austin, 4</ref> |
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==Markets and collectors== |
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== Red anchor period (1752-1756) == |
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Much of the distribution of Chelsea and other English porcelain (and fine [[earthenware]] such as [[Wedgwood]]) was through the "[[Chinaman (porcelain)|chinamen]]", already a recognised category of dealers and retailers for porcelain, and "warehouses" in Central London, which sold mainly to smaller dealers and shop-keepers, often from the provinces, but also to customers. Chelsea's arrangements are less well documented than those of Bow, but Gouyn's shop in St James was probably an outlet, at least in the early period.<ref>Davenport-Hines, 59–66</ref> |
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[[Kakiemon]] (Japanese pottery), subjects were popular from the late 1740s until around 1758, inspired by the original Japanese and then by [[Meissen porcelain|Meissen]] and [[Chantilly porcelain|Chantilly]]. Some English-inspired [[tableware]] decorated with botanically accurate plants, copied from the eighth edition of [[Philip Miller]]'s ''The Gardener's Dictionary'' (1752) were also produced in this period. |
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The annual actions were partly intended for the chinamen, with some lots made up of a range of wares to provide a stock.<ref>Austin, 7–9</ref> The [[East India Company]] had been selling its cargos of East Asian porcelain at auction for some decades. Chelsea wares reached [[British America]],<ref>Austin, 9–12</ref> but there were probably few exports to the Continent. |
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Early English porcelain was soon being collected, especially in the late 19th century, when prices rose steadily. Over the 20th century there has been a great reversal in collectors' interests, with wares from later in the century far cheaper now (allowing for inflation) than they were a century ago, while the rare earliest pieces have seen dizzying increases in value. The sale at auction in 2003 of a tureen in the form of a hen and chickens for £223,650 was then the auction record for English 18th-century porcelain.<ref>''[[Apollo (magazine)|Apollo]]'', "Now is the time to buy English porcelain…", by Emma Crichton-Miller, 23 June 2017</ref> In 2018 a pair of [[plaice]]-shaped tureens of c. 1755 from the collection of [[David Rockefeller]] and his wife fetched $300,000 (both sales at Christie's).<ref>[https://www.christies.com/lotfinder/lot/two-chelsea-porcelain-plaice-tureens-covers-and-6134645-details.aspx?lid=1&from=relatedlot&intobjectid=6134645 "TWO CHELSEA PORCELAIN PLAICE TUREENS, COVERS AND SPOONS, CIRCA 1755"], Lot 620, Sale 16722, "The Collection of Peggy and David Rockefeller: English & European Furniture, Ceramics and Decorations, Part II", Christie's New York, 10 May 2018 |
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== Gold anchor period (1756-1769) == |
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</ref> |
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The influence of [[Manufacture nationale de Sèvres|Sèvres]] was very strong and [[France|French]] taste was in the ascendancy. The [[gold]] [[anchor]] period saw rich coloured grounds, lavish gilding and the nervous energy of the [[Rococo]] style. In the 1750s and 1760s, Chelsea was also famous for its [[toy]]s, which included [[bonbonnière]]s, [[perfume|scent bottles]], [[étui]]s, [[thimble]]s and small seals, many with inscriptions in [[French language|French]]. In 1769 the failing factory was purchased by [[William Duesbury]] of [[Royal Crown Derby|Derby]] who ran it until 1784; during this time the Chelsea wares are indistinguishable from Duesbury's Derby wares and the period is usually termed "Chelsea-Derby". |
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==Gallery== |
== Gallery == |
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<gallery> |
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px"> |
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Image:GoatandBeeJug-BMA.jpg|Goat-and-Bee Jug, c. |
Image:GoatandBeeJug-BMA (cropped).jpg|Goat-and-Bee Jug, c. 1745–1749, [[Birmingham Museum of Art]] |
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File:Dogs — Chelseaporcfactory.jpg|Pair of dogs, about 1749, height {{convert|13.4|cm}}, [[Victoria and Albert Museum|V&A Museum]] |
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Image:Chelsea Porcelain Factory - Lady - c1755.jpg|A Lady, c. 1755 |
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File:Tureen, 1752-1756, Chelsea Porcelain Manufactory, England, porcelain with enamel - Art Institute of Chicago - DSC09771.JPG|Rabbit tureen, 1752–1756 |
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File:Chelsea porcelaine, colombaia, 1755-56 circa, 01.JPG|c. 1755-56 |
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File:Pair of Hexagonal Vases, c. 1752-1755, Chelsea, soft-paste porcelain with overglaze enamels - Gardiner Museum, Toronto - DSC00614.JPG|Pair of Hexagonal Vases in [[Kakiemon]] style, c. 1752–1755, [[Gardiner Museum]], [[Toronto]] |
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Image:Chelsea Porcelain Factory - Shepherdess - c1760.jpg|A Shepherdess, c. 1760 |
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File:Four Seasons (Spring) MET SF64 101 456.jpg|"Spring" from a set of the Four Seasons, 1753–1755, {{convert|5+1/4|in|cm}} high |
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Image:Chelsea Porcelain Factory - Street Vendor - c1760.jpg|A Street Vendor, c. 1760 |
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File:Chinese musicians MET DP-12587-003 (cropped).jpg|Group of Chinese musicians, red anchor, c. 1755, height: {{convert|14+1/2|in|cm}}, weight: {{convert|30.2|lb|kg}} |
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File:Perfume burner in the form of a dove-cote MET SF1971 206 25 img2.jpg|Perfume burner in the form of a dove-cote with prowling fox, c. 1759–1765, {{convert|51|cm}} high |
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File:Head of Columbine MET DP-247-111 (cropped).jpg|"Toy" [[needlecase]] with the head of [[Columbina]], c. 1760, height: {{convert|4+7/8|in|cm}}. Inscribed on enamel band on mount: NE SOYEZ POINT CRUELE ("Don't be so cruel") |
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File:Chelsea Porcelain Factory - Inkstand - Walters 48842 (2).jpg|Porcelain inkstand set, 1759–1769. The style and the "mazarine blue" ground are borrowed from Sèvres. [[The Walters Art Museum]]. |
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File:The Elements, Chelsea Porcelain Manufactory - Indianapolis Museum of Art - DSC00573.JPG|''The [[Four Elements]]'' set, 1760s |
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</gallery> |
</gallery> |
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== Notes == |
== Notes == |
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{{reflist|2}} |
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<references/> |
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== References == |
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*Austin, John Cecil, ''Chelsea Porcelain at Williamsburg'', 1977, Colonial Williamsburg, {{ISBN|0879350237}}, 9780879350239, [https://books.google.com/books?id=q0XfbNOTsswC&pg=PA1 Google Books] |
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*Davenport-Hines, R.P.T. and Liebenau, Jonathan, ''Business in the Age of Reason'', 2013, Routledge, {{ISBN|1135177104}}, 978113517710, [https://books.google.com/books?id=jQvfAQAAQBAJ&pg=PT62 Google Books] |
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*Honey, W.B., ''Old English Porcelain'', 1977 (3rd edn.), Faber and Faber, {{ISBN|0571049028}} |
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*Lippert, Catherine Beth, ''Eighteenth-century English Porcelain in the Collection of the Indianapolis Museum of Art'', 1987, Indianapolis Museum of Art/Indiana University Press, {{ISBN|0936260122}}, 9780936260129, [https://books.google.com/books?id=MmVsphu60NQC&pg=PA57 Google Books] |
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*Spero, Simon, in [[David Battie|Battie, David]], ed., ''Sotheby's Concise Encyclopedia of Porcelain'', 1990, Conran Octopus. {{ISBN|1850292515}} |
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*F. Severne McKenna, ''Chelsea Porcelain: The Red Anchor Wares'', 1951. |
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*F. Severne McKenna, ''Chelsea Porcelain: The Gold Anchor Wares'', 1952. |
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==Further reading== |
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*Adams, Elizabeth, ''Chelsea Porcelain'', 2001, British Museum Press |
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*Bryant, G.E., ''The Chelsea Porcelain Toys : scent-bottles, bonbonneries, etuis, seals and statuettes, made at the Chelsea Factory 1745–1769, & Derby Chelsea, 1770–1784'', 1925, The Medici Society |
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== External links == |
== External links == |
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{{commons category}} |
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*{{Cite web |
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* {{Cite web |
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| url=http://www.clevelandart.org/collections/collection%20online.aspx?type=refresh&csearch=Artist%20/%20Maker:Derby%20Porcelain%20Factory%20%28Chelsea-Derby%20Period%29 |
| url=http://www.clevelandart.org/collections/collection%20online.aspx?type=refresh&csearch=Artist%20/%20Maker:Derby%20Porcelain%20Factory%20%28Chelsea-Derby%20Period%29 |
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| title=Derby Porcelain Factory (Chelsea-Derby Period) |
| title=Derby Porcelain Factory (Chelsea-Derby Period) |
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| publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art |
| publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art |
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| |
| access-date=2010-07-11 |
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| archive-date=20 March 2012 |
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}} |
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| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320004935/http://www.clevelandart.org/collections/collection%20online.aspx?type=refresh&csearch=Artist%20/%20Maker:Derby%20Porcelain%20Factory%20(Chelsea-Derby%20Period) |
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*{{Cite web |
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| url-status=dead |
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}} |
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* {{Cite web |
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| url=http://www.ceramic-link.de/icd/pages/marks/marksbydescription/anchors.html |
| url=http://www.ceramic-link.de/icd/pages/marks/marksbydescription/anchors.html |
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| title=Listing of Anchor marks |
| title=Listing of Anchor marks |
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| publisher=International Ceramics Directory |
| publisher=International Ceramics Directory |
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}} |
}} |
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== References == |
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*F. Severne McKenna, ''Chelsea Porcelain: The Red Anchor Wares'', 1951. |
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*F. Severne McKenna, ''Chelsea Porcelain: The Gold Anchor Wares'', 1952. |
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==See also== |
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*[[Derby porcelain]] |
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*[[Porcelain manufacturing companies in Europe]] |
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{{Porcelain}} |
{{Porcelain}} |
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{{Derby Museum}} |
{{Derby Museum}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:Ceramics manufacturers of the United Kingdom]] |
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[[Category:British art]] |
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[[Category:Culture in London]] |
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[[Category:History of Kensington and Chelsea]] |
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[[Category:Porcelain]] |
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[[Category:Collections of Derby Museum and Art Gallery]] |
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{{coord missing|Derbyshire}} |
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[[be:Фарфоравая фабрыка Чэлсі]] |
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[[be-x-old:Парцалянавая фабрыка Чэлсі]] |
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[[Category:1743 establishments in England]] |
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[[ca:Fàbrica de porcellana de Chelsea]] |
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[[Category:1770 disestablishments in England]] |
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[[eo:Porcelan-fabriko de Chelsea]] |
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[[Category:Ceramics manufacturers of England]] |
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[[fr:Porcelaine de Chelsea]] |
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[[Category:Culture in London]] |
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[[id:Pabrik porselen Chelsea]] |
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[[Category:History of the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea]] |
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[[it:Porcellana di Chelsea]] |
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[[Category:British porcelain]] |
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[[ja:チェルシー磁器工房]] |
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[[Category:Collection of Derby Museum and Art Gallery]] |
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[[ru:Фарфоровая фабрика Челси]] |
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[[Category:Prince William, Duke of Cumberland]] |
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[[fi:Chelsean posliinitehdas]] |
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[[sv:Chelsea porcelain factory]] |
Latest revision as of 21:07, 20 November 2024
Chelsea porcelain is the porcelain made by the Chelsea porcelain manufactory, the first important porcelain manufactory in England, established around 1743–45, and operating independently until 1770, when it was merged with Derby porcelain.[2] It made soft-paste porcelain throughout its history, though there were several changes in the "body" material and glaze used. Its wares were aimed at a luxury market, and its site in Chelsea, London, was close to the fashionable Ranelagh Gardens pleasure ground, opened in 1742.[3]
The first known wares are the "goat and bee" cream jugs with seated goats at the base, some examples of which are incised with "Chelsea", "1745" and a triangle.[4] The entrepreneurial director, at least from 1750, was Nicholas Sprimont, a Huguenot silversmith in Soho, but few private documents survive to aid a picture of the factory's history.[5] Early tablewares, being produced in profusion by 1750, depend on Meissen porcelain models and on silverware prototypes, such as salt cellars in the form of realistic shells.
Chelsea was known for its figures, initially mostly single standing figures of the Cries of London and other subjects. Many of these were very small by European standards, from about 2+1⁄2 to 3+1⁄2 inches (6 to 9 cm) high, overlapping with the category of "Chelsea Toys", for which the factory was famous in the 1750s and 1760s. These were very small pieces which often had metal mounts and were functional as bonbonnières (little boxes), scent bottles, needlecases, étuis, thimbles and small seals, many with inscriptions in French,[6] "almost invariably amorous suggestions",[7] but often misspelled.[8]
From about 1760, its inspiration was drawn more from Sèvres porcelain than Meissen, making grand garnitures of vases and elaborate large groups with seated couples in front of a bocage screen of flowering plants, all on a raised base of Rococo scrollwork. As with other English factories, much of the sales came from public auctions, held about once a year; copies of the catalogues for 1755, 1756 and (in part) 1761 are very useful to scholars.[9] In 1770, the manufactory was purchased by William Duesbury, owner of the Derby porcelain factory, and the wares are indistinguishable during the "Chelsea-Derby period" that lasted until 1784,[10] when the Chelsea factory was demolished and its moulds, patterns and many of its workmen and artists transferred to Derby.[11]
Periods by marks
[edit]The factory history, before the merger with Derby, can be divided into four main periods, named for the identifying marks under the wares, although the changes in marks do not exactly coincide with changes in materials or style. Some pieces are unmarked in all periods, and there appears to be some overlapping of marks; indeed some pieces have two different marks. There are also anchor marks in blue and brown,[12] and an extremely rare "crown and trident" mark in underglaze blue, known on only about 20 pieces, and thought to date from around 1749. A chipped beaker with this mark fetched £37,000 at auction in 2015.[13]
Although the first three examples shown here are from the underside of the bases of pieces, where most porcelain factory marks are placed, the very small Chelsea anchor marks are often "tucked away in the most unexpected places".[14] In the group of Chinese musicians, the tiny red anchor mark is visible on the raised base at ankle level, between the woman with the tambourine and the boy.[15]
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Incised triangle
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Red anchor
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Gold anchor
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Red anchor (near top) from the group of Chinese musicians (shown below)
Triangle period (around 1743–1749)
[edit]These early products bore an incised triangle mark. Most of the wares were white and were strongly influenced by silverware designs.[16] The early body was "a very translucent material, resembling milk-white glass",[17] later changing "to a harder and rather colder-looking material".[18] Slipcasting rather than pressing paste into the moulds was introduced during this period, and remained usual for Chelsea figures.[19]
The most notable products of this era were white saltcellars in the shape of crayfish. Perhaps the most famous pieces are the Goat and Bee jugs that were also based on a silver model. Copies of these were made by Coalport porcelain in the 19th century. Sales were suspended in March 1749, which appears to be when Sprimont took control, and the factory was moved a short distance within Chelsea.[20]
Raised anchor period (1749–1752)
[edit]On 9 January 1750 Sprimont advertised the reopening of the factory, with "a great Variety of Pieces for Ornament in a Taste entirely new", and the new mark is assumed to celebrate this.[22] The factory was very close to the Thames, and the anchor is a symbol of hope, and of Saint Nicolas of Myra, patron saint of seamen, after whom Sprimont was perhaps named.[23]
The next six or so years were the most successful for the factory.[24] In this period, the paste and glaze were modified to produce a clear, white, slightly opaque surface on which to paint. The influence of Meissen is evident in the classical figures among Italianate ruins and harbour scenes and adaptations from Francis Barlow's edition of Aesop's Fables.[25] In 1751, copies were made of two Meissen services. Chelsea also made figures, birds and animals inspired by Meissen originals. Flowers and landscapes were copied from Vincennes porcelain (soon to move to Sèvres). A set of figures of pairs of birds were evidently based on the illustrations to A Natural History of Uncommon Birds, by George Edwards, published in four volumes from 1743 to 1751. The copies used were probably with uncoloured illustrations, as though the forms follow the illustrations well, the colouring of the figures is often eccentric and inaccurate.[26]
Red anchor period (1752–1756)
[edit]As at Meissen and Chantilly some time earlier, imitations of Japanese export porcelain in the Kakiemon style were popular from the late 1740s until around 1758. These were copied both from the Continental imitations and Japanese originals, and some apparently freshly created in the style.[27]
Some tableware was decorated with bold and botanically accurate paintings of plants, known as "botanical" pieces, which essentially take onto porcelain the style of the large botanical book illustrations that were beginning to be produced, and often hand-coloured. The factory was very close to the Chelsea Physic Garden (founded 1673 and still open on the same site), which may have influenced the approach, and at least provided illustrated books as models. Some pieces were copied from various books, including those by Philip Miller, the director of the gardens (the eighth edition of The Gardener's Dictionary (1752) and Figures of Plants, vol 1, 1755) and Georg Dionysius Ehret. An advertisement in 1758 offered "Table Plates, Soup Plates, and Desart Plates enamelled from the Hans Sloane's Plants" (Sloane had set up the garden's current site in 1722).[28]
These innovative pieces exerted a long-lasting influence on porcelain design, especially in Britain,[29] and similar styles have seen a strong revival from the late 20th century, led by Portmeirion Pottery's "Botanic Garden" range, launched in 1972, using designs adapted from Thomas Green's Universal or-Botanical, Medical and Agricultural Dictionary (1817).
The small "Toys", which become prominent in this period, may have been copied from the elusive "Girl-in-a Swing" factory, now usually located at St James's, an even more fashionable location in the West End of London, which was active about 1751–54. This seems to have been connected to the Chelsea factory in some way.[30] Another development was tureens and sometimes other large forms in the shapes of animals, birds or plants.[31]
Examples of fairly exact copying of Meissen wares are the "Monkey Band" (Affenkapelle or "ape orchestra" in German), a group of ten figures of monkey musicians, and a larger excited conductor, all in fancy contemporary costumes. Such singeries were popular in various media.[32]
Gold anchor period (1756–1769)
[edit]The influence of Sèvres was very strong and French taste was in the ascendancy. Although many existing types continued to be produced, the gold anchor period saw rich coloured grounds, lavish gilding and the nervous energy of the Rococo style. As had been the case with imitations of Meissen Kakiemon, Chelsea began to imitate the Sèvres Rococo style just as Sèvres itself was abandoning it for more restrained shapes and decoration.[33] Chelsea garnitures of vases became very large and elaborate, some with as many as seven pieces in diminishing sizes. The body now included bone ash, and a wider range of colours was used, as well as lavish gilding.[34] The glaze now had a tendency to drip and pool, as well as crazing, and had a slight greenish tint.[35]
In 1763, George III and Queen Charlotte sent the queen's brother Adolphus Frederick IV, Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz a large Chelsea service. This commissioning of porcelain for diplomatic gifts was common among the ruler-owned European factories (and indeed in East Asia), but novel for England. The service was praised by Horace Walpole, who said it cost £1,200, and is now mostly in the Royal Collection, who have 137 pieces.[36]
East Asian styles had returned in the red anchor period in the form of versions of Japanese Imari ware, but are more common with the gold anchor. These were to remain an English favourite, especially associated with later Crown Derby, and versions are still made today. According to at least one English authority the first Chelsea versions "greatly surpass in beauty their dull originals".[37]
Evidence suggests that production was low from 1763, perhaps because Sprimont wished to retire. A sale in 1763 included at least some moulds and premises, as well as household furniture of Sprimont. No dedicated sale was then held until 1769, when moulds were offered again.[38]
In August 1769, the factory was sold by Sprimont, whose health had been bad, and the next year it was purchased by William Duesbury of Derby porcelain who ran it until 1784; Sprimont sold the factory in August 1769 to a James Cox. Duesbury and his partner John Heath bought it in February 1770.[39] The factory continued to operate in Chelsea but during this time the Chelsea wares are indistinguishable from Duesbury's Derby wares and the period is usually termed "Chelsea-Derby". A final Chelsea sale (at Christie's) began on 14 February 1770.[40]
Management and artists
[edit]The silversmith Nicholas Sprimont (1716–1771), who came from Liège in modern Belgium, was the usual public face of the factory, but there were other main figures, and the precise roles of all of them are uncertain. Charles Gouyn or Gouyon (before 1737–1782) was another London Huguenot silversmith, and also a dealer in porcelain, who was involved in the early years, but whose role is obscure. He has been suggested as being "concerned with the technical part of the manufacture", or as providing the finance, and acting as a major buyer or distributor of wares. By 1749 or 1750 there may have been a rift between the two.[41] Gouyn may have founded the "Girl-in-a-Swing" factory or St James's factory, named after the fashionable street where he had a shop.[42]
Any porcelain factory needed an "arcanist", or chemist who could devise the formulae for the body paste, glaze, and colours, and specify the firing variables. It is not clear who this was at Chelsea; a paper in the British Museum believed to be by Sprimont speaks of having "a casual acquaintance with a chymist who had some knowledge that way", who influenced him to start the factory. Gouyn is one suggestion; another is a Thomas Bryand or Briand, who in 1743 showed the Royal Society examples of porcelain. By 1746 he was living in Staffordshire, establishing a business partnership, self-described as a painter who "had found out ye art of making an Earthenware Little inferior to Porcelain or China Ware"; but he seems to have died the following year.[43]
Large payments to the factory are recorded in 1746 to 1748 from Sir Everard Fawkener, secretary to the king's third son, Prince William, Duke of Cumberland, who had put down the Jacobite rising of 1745. It is not clear if these were on behalf of the prince or from Fawkener's own funds, or the exact nature of what seems to have been a financing operation. Whereas royal investment in porcelain manufacturing was very common in Europe, it would have been unprecedented in England. A five inch high portrait head of the prince was produced, which was an unusual departure from Chelsea's normal wares. In 1751 a letter says that Fawkener borrowed some Meissen pieces to be copied in Chelsea, and was described as "concerned in the manufacture of China at Chelsea", while the same writer adds "I find that the Duke is a great encourager of the Chelsea China". A worker at the factory believed that Fawkener and Cumberland were the first owners, who employed Sprimont at a guinea a day. Fawkener died in 1758, in some financial difficulties, and at this point Sprimont may have finally become the full owner.[44]
Sprimont is generally regarded as the guiding hand of the tableware shapes, which made heavy use of metal precedents. Few of the many artists involved are known. The main modeller of figures was the Flemish sculptor Joseph Willems, at Chelsea from about 1749 to 1766, when he left for the factory at Tournai. The miniature painter Jefferyes Hamett O'Neale has been identified as the "Chelsea Fable Painter", though not without objections; he later signed pieces of Worcester porcelain, though probably working in London. W.B. Honey felt the signed Worcester pieces were too crude to be by the hand of the "Chelsea Fable Painter", though more recent writers accept the identification.[45]
The leading sculptor Louis-François Roubiliac, French but working in London, was long believed to have modelled many figures, which were additionally marked with an impressed "R", but it seems that this mark means something else, and it is likely that there were at most only a handful of instances of models by him. Sprimont was the godfather of one of his daughters.[46] One Chelsea figure certainly based on his work is the reclining portrait of the painter William Hogarth's pug dog called Trump. Roubiliac sculpted Trump in terracotta in about 1741, to accompany a bust of Hogarth. The figure appeared in Chelsea porcelain some years later, and then in Josiah Wedgwood's Black Basalt ware after he bought a cast of the terracotta in 1774.[47] A portrait bust of Frederick, Prince of Wales also appears close to Roubiliac's style.[48]
William Duesbury, who bought the factory in 1770, had been a painter of Chelsea and other wares at his own London workshop, which is documented by an account book of his covering 1751 to 1753 which has survived. However, no Chelsea pieces by his workshop can be securely identified.[49] The books record many figures of birds in particular.[50]
Markets and collectors
[edit]Much of the distribution of Chelsea and other English porcelain (and fine earthenware such as Wedgwood) was through the "chinamen", already a recognised category of dealers and retailers for porcelain, and "warehouses" in Central London, which sold mainly to smaller dealers and shop-keepers, often from the provinces, but also to customers. Chelsea's arrangements are less well documented than those of Bow, but Gouyn's shop in St James was probably an outlet, at least in the early period.[51] The annual actions were partly intended for the chinamen, with some lots made up of a range of wares to provide a stock.[52] The East India Company had been selling its cargos of East Asian porcelain at auction for some decades. Chelsea wares reached British America,[53] but there were probably few exports to the Continent.
Early English porcelain was soon being collected, especially in the late 19th century, when prices rose steadily. Over the 20th century there has been a great reversal in collectors' interests, with wares from later in the century far cheaper now (allowing for inflation) than they were a century ago, while the rare earliest pieces have seen dizzying increases in value. The sale at auction in 2003 of a tureen in the form of a hen and chickens for £223,650 was then the auction record for English 18th-century porcelain.[54] In 2018 a pair of plaice-shaped tureens of c. 1755 from the collection of David Rockefeller and his wife fetched $300,000 (both sales at Christie's).[55]
Gallery
[edit]-
Goat-and-Bee Jug, c. 1745–1749, Birmingham Museum of Art
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Pair of dogs, about 1749, height 13.4 centimetres (5.3 in), V&A Museum
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Rabbit tureen, 1752–1756
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"Spring" from a set of the Four Seasons, 1753–1755, 5+1⁄4 inches (13 cm) high
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Group of Chinese musicians, red anchor, c. 1755, height: 14+1⁄2 inches (37 cm), weight: 30.2 pounds (13.7 kg)
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Perfume burner in the form of a dove-cote with prowling fox, c. 1759–1765, 51 centimetres (20 in) high
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"Toy" needlecase with the head of Columbina, c. 1760, height: 4+7⁄8 inches (12 cm). Inscribed on enamel band on mount: NE SOYEZ POINT CRUELE ("Don't be so cruel")
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Porcelain inkstand set, 1759–1769. The style and the "mazarine blue" ground are borrowed from Sèvres. The Walters Art Museum.
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The Four Elements set, 1760s
Notes
[edit]- ^ Honey, 60
- ^ The Bow factory was granted a patent in 1744 but no examples of its wares predating the first works of Chelsea porcelain are known.
- ^ Spero, 118
- ^ Honey, 16
- ^ Honey, 17–24
- ^ Spero, 120; Honey, 76–80
- ^ Honey, 78–80
- ^ Honey, 76–78
- ^ Lippert, 57–58
- ^ Or at least, distinguished with great uncertainty and difficulty. See Honey, 144–152.
- ^ Lippert, 58
- ^ Lippert, 58, note 1; Austin, 1–3 (including a good set of photos); Honey, 384–385, with drawings.
- ^ "£37,000 clue to another side of Chelsea", by Roland Arkell, 10 Mar 2015, Antiques Trade Gazette; Austin, 2
- ^ Honey, 34 note 8
- ^ Metropolitan photo
- ^ Spero, 118
- ^ Honey, 20
- ^ Honey, 24
- ^ Lippert, 58
- ^ Spero, 118
- ^ They seem to be two males of Clamator Glandarius, not to be seen in England; Bird guide illustration
- ^ Spero, 118
- ^ Lippert, 58
- ^ Spero, 118
- ^ Austin, 3–4
- ^ Austin, 4; Honey, 52–54
- ^ Austin, 5
- ^ Spero, 120; Austin, 5–6
- ^ Honey, 44
- ^ Lippert, 58, note 6 (whose dates are used); Honey, 30–32, 76; Spero, 120; Royal Collection, Flask "probably "Girl-in-a Swing""
- ^ Spero, 120
- ^ Honey, 52; Austin, 6–7, 132–140
- ^ Lappet, 57; Spero, 120
- ^ Spero, 120
- ^ Lappet, 57
- ^ Honey, 66–68; Royal Collection
- ^ Honey, 68–70, 68 quoted
- ^ Honey, 56
- ^ Lippert, 58; Spero, 120, 128; Honey, 56–58
- ^ Honey, 56–58
- ^ Honey, 16–18, 18 quoted; Lippert, 57
- ^ Royal Collection page on an etui
- ^ Honey, 18–20; Lippert, 57
- ^ Lippert, 57; Honey, 40, 54; Head of Cumberland
- ^ Honey, 13, 42, 268; Lippert, 57; Spero, 119
- ^ Honey, 34, 60. The "Music Lesson" illustrated at top is one of the "R"-marked pieces.
- ^ Chelsea figure, V&A
- ^ Honey, 34
- ^ Honey, 13
- ^ Austin, 4
- ^ Davenport-Hines, 59–66
- ^ Austin, 7–9
- ^ Austin, 9–12
- ^ Apollo, "Now is the time to buy English porcelain…", by Emma Crichton-Miller, 23 June 2017
- ^ "TWO CHELSEA PORCELAIN PLAICE TUREENS, COVERS AND SPOONS, CIRCA 1755", Lot 620, Sale 16722, "The Collection of Peggy and David Rockefeller: English & European Furniture, Ceramics and Decorations, Part II", Christie's New York, 10 May 2018
References
[edit]- Austin, John Cecil, Chelsea Porcelain at Williamsburg, 1977, Colonial Williamsburg, ISBN 0879350237, 9780879350239, Google Books
- Davenport-Hines, R.P.T. and Liebenau, Jonathan, Business in the Age of Reason, 2013, Routledge, ISBN 1135177104, 978113517710, Google Books
- Honey, W.B., Old English Porcelain, 1977 (3rd edn.), Faber and Faber, ISBN 0571049028
- Lippert, Catherine Beth, Eighteenth-century English Porcelain in the Collection of the Indianapolis Museum of Art, 1987, Indianapolis Museum of Art/Indiana University Press, ISBN 0936260122, 9780936260129, Google Books
- Spero, Simon, in Battie, David, ed., Sotheby's Concise Encyclopedia of Porcelain, 1990, Conran Octopus. ISBN 1850292515
- F. Severne McKenna, Chelsea Porcelain: The Red Anchor Wares, 1951.
- F. Severne McKenna, Chelsea Porcelain: The Gold Anchor Wares, 1952.
Further reading
[edit]- Adams, Elizabeth, Chelsea Porcelain, 2001, British Museum Press
- Bryant, G.E., The Chelsea Porcelain Toys : scent-bottles, bonbonneries, etuis, seals and statuettes, made at the Chelsea Factory 1745–1769, & Derby Chelsea, 1770–1784, 1925, The Medici Society
External links
[edit]- "Derby Porcelain Factory (Chelsea-Derby Period)". Cleveland Museum of Art. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 11 July 2010.
- "Listing of Anchor marks". International Ceramics Directory.