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Other European Porcelain

Collection Info
Other European Porcelain

Soft- and hard-paste European porcelain manufactories which do not appear as separate categories on this site can be found in this section.

Soft-paste porcelain continued to be made in Europe during the first three quarters of the eighteenth century. However, once the components and technology of the arcanum (the secrets of porcelain production) became known, and deposits of kaolin were found, hard-paste porcelain manufactories sprang up all across Europe in the second half of the eighteenth century. Porcelain manufactories from Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, and Russia are represented in the collection.

Most eighteenth-century European porcelain manufactories are found in the Gardiner Museum, largely thanks to the gift of the heirs of Dr. Hans Syz, who donated 430 figures and wares from 56 porcelain manufactories.

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Chocolate Pot with Leopards
c.1775
Object number: G83.1.1104.1-2
Plate with the with Meissen's 'Zwiebelmuster' pattern
Artist / Maker: Royal Copenhagen Manufactory
c.1780-1820
Object number: G96.5.60
Fish strainer with Meissen's 'Zwiebelmuster' pattern
Artist / Maker: Royal Copenhagen Manufactory
c.1780-1800
Object number: G96.5.59
Figure of a satyr holding a goat
Artist / Maker: Royal Copenhagen Manufactory
c.1780
Object number: G96.5.58
Figure of a farmer holding a goose
Artist / Maker: Royal Copenhagen Manufactory
c.1780
Object number: G96.5.57
Plate in the 'Flora Danica' pattern with named botanical
Artist / Maker: Royal Copenhagen Manufactory
19th century
Object number: G91.7.74
Rococo Cartouche
Artist / Maker: Royal Copenhagen Manufactory
c.1775
Object number: G83.1.1065
Young Man Holding a Dog
Artist / Maker: Royal Copenhagen Manufactory
c.1780
Object number: G83.1.1064