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Source Description
Sèvres Manufactory produced this Neoclassical sugar bowl as part of a tea service for Louis-Philippe, King of France from 1830-1848. The service consisted of a matching coffeepot, teapot, sugar bowl, milk jug, and multiple sets of cups and saucers. The Walters Art Museum’s collection includes the teapot, sugar bowl, milk jug, and two cups and saucers. The sugar bowl would have held refined, white chunks of sugar that had been imported from the New World. The porcelain service is ornamented in gilding, giving each piece a jewel-like appearance. Louis-Philippe’s crowned monogram, encircled by bound branches of oak and laurel, takes a central position on each piece. Vines of ivy ring the top of the vessels, while flower blossoms are scattered across the porcelain’s white ground. Louis-Philippe abolished the practice of the Grand Couvert, the ritual of the King and Queen eating their meals before an audience as a way to reinforce hierarchy. However, he continued to use meal time to call attention to status by commissioning Sèvres to produce different porcelain services for the various ranks in his household. Each royal residence had its own set of the different services. The pieces in the Walters’ tea set are examples of “le service des princes,” the Sèvres service used by the King and his family during visits to the Chateau de Compigne, a property northeast of Paris.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
5585
label
Sugar Bowl and Cover
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
2
Source metadata
id
5585
sourceUrl
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Sugar Bowl and Cover
description
Sèvres Manufactory produced this Neoclassical sugar bowl as part of a tea service for Louis-Philippe, King of France from 1830-1848. The service consisted of a matching coffeepot, teapot, sugar bowl, milk jug, and multiple sets of cups and saucers. The Walters Art Museum’s collection includes the teapot, sugar bowl, milk jug, and two cups and saucers. The sugar bowl would have held refined, white chunks of sugar that had been imported from the New World. The porcelain service is ornamented in gilding, giving each piece a jewel-like appearance. Louis-Philippe’s crowned monogram, encircled by bound branches of oak and laurel, takes a central position on each piece. Vines of ivy ring the top of the vessels, while flower blossoms are scattered across the porcelain’s white ground. Louis-Philippe abolished the practice of the Grand Couvert, the ritual of the King and Queen eating their meals before an audience as a way to reinforce hierarchy. However, he continued to use meal time to call attention to status by commissioning Sèvres to produce different porcelain services for the various ranks in his household. Each royal residence had its own set of the different services. The pieces in the Walters’ tea set are examples of “le service des princes,” the Sèvres service used by the King and his family during visits to the Chateau de Compigne, a property northeast of Paris.
date
1841
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
bowls (vessels)
covers
imageCount
2
pageCount
2
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Overall Bowl & Cover (A & B) H: 4 15/16 in. (12.6 cm); Bowl (A) H: 4 1/4 × W with handles: 5 1/8 × Max D: 3 15/16 in. (10.8 × 13 × 10 cm); Cover (B) H: 1 1/16 × Diam: 3 7/16 in. (2.7 × 8.7 cm).
Source extras
inscriptions
[Factory Mark] Blue circle with crowned monogram “LP” and a date of 1841 on bottom of bowl; [Chateau Mark] Red
sun-like circle with crowned “Chateau de Compiegne” printed in the center on bottom of bowl; [Molders Mark] numerous incised
illegible marks designating potters who cast the piece on bottom of bowl.
RelatedObjects
29167
4528
24027
13533
med
hard paste porcelain
creator_ids
6229
1916
2589
collection_ids
none
exhibition_ids
none
Page inventory
seq
1
type
photo
mediaId
eb94ed2fbf66ff48
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
2
type
photo
mediaId
545d3804376a19c3
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no