Bottger manufactured the first ‘true’ porcelain after suitable kaolin clay was found at Aue in Germany in 1709. Roughly explained, “hard” porcelain is created by mixing water with alumina (white clay) and silica (often seen in grains of quartz or sand), to form a paste. The composition of “artificial” or “soft” porcelain, varied with the manufacture of each production style. “Soft” porcelain indicates firstly that the porcelain cannot resist as high a temperature as “hard” porcelain, and secondly that the “soft” glaze of the porcelain can be scratched more easily.

Original lithographs, illustrating the finest of Faience porcelain, were printed in colour by Ris-Paquot in Amiens, for Histoire des Faiences de Rouen published in Paris circa 1870 by Eugene Delaroque. Faience porcelain was soft-coloured, warm milky white, and very translucent, traditionally decorated by foliated patterns and floral designs of typical French style, or ornamented by coloured designs in imitation of the old Chinese and Japanese porcelain. You will find some beautiful examples on our website at www.antiqueprintclub.com/c-24-porcelainartifacts
Around 1719 at Dresden in Germany, Johann Friederich Bottger managed the factory and was responsible for producing the earliest White Saxon porcelain, Meissen. The French were renowned for all styles of objet d’art, but the popularity of Dresden porcelain from Saxony inspired the French to greater efforts in making finer porcelain. New factories around France attempted to imitate Faience porcelain – at Lille in 1711, Chantilly in 1725, and at Mennecy around 1735. The porcelain developed at Chantilly under the protection of royalty soon gained greatest recognition.
The enamel or glaze acquired a particularly fine delicacy of tone and harmony of colour, but the factory was only able to proceed with regular financial support from King Louis V. In 1748, in France, the Comptroller-general of Finance, Count d’Arnouville, together with Louis XV’s mistress and intellectual benefactor Madame de Pompadour, recommended Louis XV to extend his patronage of the factory at Vincennes. The Director of the Academy of Sciences in Paris, Monsieur Jean Hellot (1685-1766), was appointed to oversea all aspects of the manufacture of the porcelain. Duplessis, the Court Jeweller, a skilful artist, was commissioned to design the forms and supervise their execution. The painting and gilding was supervised by enamel painter, Mathieu, - and later by Bachelier who created more original and stylish designs. The result was the exquisite porcelain we know today as Sevres.
The enamel or glaze acquired a particularly fine delicacy of tone and harmony of colour, but the factory was only able to proceed with regular financial support from King Louis V. In 1748, in France, the Comptroller-general of Finance, Count d’Arnouville, together with Louis XV’s mistress and intellectual benefactor Madame de Pompadour, recommended Louis XV to extend his patronage of the factory at Vincennes. The Director of the Academy of Sciences in Paris, Monsieur Jean Hellot (1685-1766), was appointed to oversea all aspects of the manufacture of the porcelain. Duplessis, the Court Jeweller, a skilful artist, was commissioned to design the forms and supervise their execution. The painting and gilding was supervised by enamel painter, Mathieu, - and later by Bachelier who created more original and stylish designs. The result was the exquisite porcelain we know today as Sevres.

Beautiful original chromolithographs (many heightened with gold) by Gillot, showing the exquisite luminosity, and the richness of colour and gilding of Sevres porcelain are available at www.antiqueprintclub.com/c-24-porcelainartifacts. These antique lithographs represent some of the 250 watercolours of the finest examples of Sevres porcelain (many now in famous collections around the world), selected from the factory’s glory years of production during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, for Le Porcelaine Tendre de Sevres by Edouard Garnier, published in Paris in 1891 by Maison Quantin.
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