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Figure of a woman with wings and a basket, porzellanmanufaktur Frankenthal

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Figure of a woman with wings and a basket, porzellanmanufaktur Frankenthal

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Beeld van porselein, beschilderd op het glazuur in emailkleuren. Het beeld stelt een vrouw voor, die vleugels op haar rug heeft en een mand aan haar arm. Gemerkt op de onderzijde met de leeuw en PH3.

Imported Chinese porcelains were held in such great esteem in Europe that in English china became a commonly–used synonym for the Italian-derived porcelain. The first mention of porcelain in Europe is in Il Milione by Marco Polo in the 13th century. Apart from copying Chinese porcelain in faience (tin glazed earthenware), the soft-paste Medici porcelain in 16th-century Florence was the first real European attempt to reproduce it, with little success. Early in the 16th century, Portuguese traders returned home with samples of kaolin, which they discovered in China to be essential in the production of porcelain wares. However, the Chinese techniques and composition used to manufacture porcelain were not yet fully understood. Countless experiments to produce porcelain had unpredictable results and met with failure. In the German state of Saxony, the search concluded in 1708 when Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus produced a hard, white, translucent type of porcelain specimen with a combination of ingredients, including kaolin and alabaster, mined from a Saxon mine in Colditz. It was a closely guarded trade secret of the Saxon enterprise. In 1712, many of the elaborate Chinese porcelain manufacturing secrets were revealed throughout Europe by the French Jesuit father Francois Xavier d'Entrecolles and soon published in the Lettres édifiantes et curieuses de Chine par des missionnaires jésuites. The secrets, which d'Entrecolles read about and witnessed in China, were now known and began seeing use in Europe

date_range

Date

1755 - 1769
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Source

Rijksmuseum
copyright

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Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication ("CCO 1.0 Dedication")

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