Sèvres An Etruscan carafe-shaped vase of... - Lot 160 - Osenat

Lot 160
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Estimation :
6000 - 8000 EUR
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Result : 13 750EUR
Sèvres An Etruscan carafe-shaped vase of... - Lot 160 - Osenat
Sèvres An Etruscan carafe-shaped vase of the second size with polychrome decoration on a blue background on one side of a portrait of Emperor Napoleon I in the uniform of mounted hunters of the Imperial Guard in an oval medallion surrounded by a garland of oak leaves in gold and platinum and surrounded by two laurel branches tied in gold, the neck and foot with simulated gadroons in gold, it has two gilt bronze handles in the form of foliated scrolls. The portrait signed and dated: Cce Turgan, 1852, for Clémence Turgan. Marked in the collar with the red vignette: imperial eagle S 52. Napoleon III period, year 1852. H. 42 cm. This vase is one of the two 2 nd size carafe vases that entered the sales shop on April 29, 1853 at the price of 80 francs each and described blue background at the big fire, gold decoration, coloured portraits of Napoleon I and Josephine, (Arch. MNC, Sèvres, Vv5, 67, 57). The portraits are painted by Clémence Turgan, active in Sèvres in 1830 and again between 1837 and 1852. She begins the vases in February 1852 and finishes them in October 1852, receiving 400 francs for both portraits (Arch. Sèvres, Vj'58, f°168). While he was still Prince President, Louis Napoleon Bonaparte ordered several vases from the Sèvres manufactory decorated with portraits of members of the imperial family. A pair of blue-bottomed Thériclian vases decorated with the same portraits of Napoleon and Josephine was delivered to the palace of Saint-Cloud to H.M. Emperor Napoleon III on October 10, 1853 (Arch. Sèvres, Vbb11, f°295 v°). Another pair of Etruscan decanter vases with a green background decorated with portraits of King Louis Bonaparte and Queen Hortense is delivered to the palace of Compiègne where it is still preserved (B. Ducrot, Porcelaines et terres de Sèvres, Musée national du château de Compiègne, 1993, n° 163 p. 217). The destination of our vase and the one with the portrait of Josephine does not appear in the Sèvres archives, but we can assume that they were also delivered to Napoleon III for one of his residences.
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