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Two-handled Covered Cup

Maker (French, active from 1756 to the present)
Additional Title(s)
  • Gobelet à Lait
ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Datepossibly mid 19th Century
Mediumhard-paste porcelain, overglaze pink ground color, polychrome enamel decoration, gilding, accented with red enamel
Dimensionsincluding lid and handles: 4 3/4 x 5 7/8 in. (12.1 x 14.9 cm.)
DescriptionA large bucket-shaped cup with two simple scroll handles and a high, domed cover with a flower knop.
InscribedThe cup is painted underneath in blue enamel with the crossed Ls of the Sèvres manufactory enclosing the date letter E for 1757, and with four dots, one each above and below the two points where the Ls cross. The cup is incised underneath, in the bisque, ap
Markings
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. The Arabella D. Huntington Memorial Art Collection.
Label TextThe cup and saucer are made according to the eighteenth-century model of a gobelet à lait (see cat. 102 for a discussion of this model). However, this example appears to be made of hard porcelain, and the painted and gilded decoration is stiff and deliberate in design and execution, lacking any rococo imagination or variety, all indications that the piece was made during the nineteenth century.
Anomalies in the markings also suggest a nineteenth-century date. The cup has the incised mark ap that could be for the répareur Nicolas-Alexandre Percheron, who was active at Sèvres between 1827 and 1864. However, it also is marked in blue enamel with the crossed Ls of the eighteenth-century royal manufactory and the mark of four dots along the center axis of the Ls that was used by members of the Armand family. Louis-Denis (?) Armand was a flower painter at Sèvres between 1768 and 1778, and there was a répareur, Alexis Pépin, who worked in hard paste from 1773 and may have used the mark ap. The painted mark also includes a letter E between the Ls for the date 1757. That date is incompatible with the material (hard-paste porcelain was not made at Sèvres before the late 1760s) and the active dates of both Armand and Pépin. The painted marks are also remarkably precise and even in their delineation that is uncharacteristic of marks painted in the eighteenth century. It is probable, therefore, that the cup was made in the nineteenth century with Percheron as the répareur and that it was painted with marks in imitation of eighteenth-century examples.

Status
Not on view
Object number27.57
Two Handled Covered Cup
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1757
Object number: 27.77
Lidded Bowl
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1759
Object number: 27.53
Lidded Bowl
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1757
Object number: 27.73
Covered Jug
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
porcelain: 18th Century; decoration: probably 19th Century
Object number: 27.81
Tray
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1759
Object number: 27.53A
Tray [1 of 2]
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1757
Object number: 27.56
Tray
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1757
Object number: 27.74
Tray [2 of 2]
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1757
Object number: 27.78
Lidded Vase
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
ca. 1770 and later
Object number: 27.129
Lidded Bowl and Tray
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1765-1775
Object number: 27.60
Photography © 2015 Fredrik Nilsen
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1781
Object number: 27.35
Lidded Vase [2 of 2]
Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
1774
Object number: 27.39