SEVRES Hard porcelain plate decorated with... - Lot 221 - Osenat

Lot 221
Go to lot
Estimation :
2000 - 3000 EUR
Result with fees
Result : 6 875EUR
SEVRES Hard porcelain plate decorated with... - Lot 221 - Osenat
SEVRES Hard porcelain plate decorated with a gold rosette in the center formed of ivy branches surrounded by a garland of polychrome flowers forming a medallion, the wing decorated with a frieze of foliage on a beautiful blue background. Marked: de Sèvres and triangle, the terms M. Imple erased. D. 24 cm. Little wear. Provenance: This plate comes from a service used by Napoleon I at the Tuileries castle and taken, at least in part, by him to St. Helena, as a service of use, at the same time as the service of the Quartiers Généraux, remaining a service of pomp. The decoration of this service is described in the archives of the manufacture of Sevres: beautiful blue bottom, gold frieze and garland of flowers. A first part was delivered in 1806 to General Count Bertrand (1773-1844), Grand Marshal of the Palace of the Tuileries1. A second part of this service was delivered for the use of the Emperor, still at the Tuileries, in August 18082, which suggests that the first part of the service was also intended for Napoleon I, the Grand Marshal acting as an intermediary in this delivery. During the first Restoration, between April 1814 and March 1815, a certain number of Sèvres porcelains present in the imperial residences, in particular the 72 plates of the Quartiers Généraux service kept at the Tuileries, were sent to the Sèvres manufactory in order to have the imperial mark of the Sèvres manufactory ground and covered with two large engraved interlaced Ls painted in black. The plates of the beautiful blue service garlands of flowers of the Emperor in Tuileries borrow the same way. A plate of this service, today preserved in the castle of Malmaison, carries the mention: "brought back to St Helena". After the Hundred Days, in June 1815, Fouchet authorised the Emperor to take 60 plates from the Quartier Général service to St Helena. He did not use the plates from the private service at Longwood but gave several plates to his entourage3. On the other hand, it seems that the Emperor took plates from the Beau Bleu Guirlandes service to St Helena for daily use. During the Restoration, the Beau Bleu service was used by King Louis XVIII at the Tuileries castle and mentioned in an inventory in 1821 as "the king's first service, with garlands "4 48 plates are mentioned in 1848 at the advent of Napoleon III in a state of the porcelain at the Tuileries described: "48 dessert plates with a blue border, gold garland, rosette and garlands of flowers on the bottom generally altered by use. "5 1Archives, Cité de la céramique, Sèvres et Limoges, Vu, f° 120 2Archives, Cité de la céramique, Sèvres et Limoges, Vbb, fol. 65 v., see Napoleon I and Sèvres, L'art de la porcelaine au service de l'Empire, collective work under the direction of Camille Le Prince, Paris, 2016, no. 76, p. 261 and no. 118, p. 2741. 3Bernard Chevallier, Trésor de la Fondation Napoléon, dans l'intimité de la Cour Impériale, exhibition September 28, 2004-April 3, 2005, p. 128. 4Arch. Nat. Carton O3 73, cited by Tamara Préaud, "Les services de porcelaine de Sèvres sous le premier Empire, la Restauration et le Second Empire", in Versailles et la Tables Royales en Europe, exhibition catalogue, 1993, p. 218. 5Arch. Nat. Carton F33* 832 and Tamara Préaud, op. cit. SEVRES PORCELAIN PLATE MARKED: DE SEVRES AND TRIANGLE, THE TERMS M. IMPLE ERASED. THIS PLATE COMES FROM A SERVICE USED BY NAPOLEON I AT THE CHATEAU DES TUILERIES AND TAKEN, AT LEAST IN PART, BY HIM TO SAINT HELENA, AS A CUSTOMARY SERVICE, AT THE SAME TIME AS THE SERVICE OF THE HEADQUARTERS, REMAINING SERVICE OF APPARAT.
My orders
Sale information
Sales conditions
Return to catalogue