Antique French Soft Paste Porcelain Mennecy Blush Pot Hand-Painted Circa 1750
$900.00
This beautiful Mennecy blush pot, ‘Pot à Fard,’ was made in France circa 1750. It is decorated with sprays of flowers, the finial shaped as a single purple rose with green leaves. The flowers are hand-painted in rich enamel colors, among them the distinctive Mennecy purple-rose hue. Another color associated with Mennecy is the most beautiful green found on the raised leaves of the rose finial and the leaves surrounding the flowers. This pot is particularly appealing because the painting of the flowers is so robust.
The Mennecy Porcelain Manufactory was one of the first French porcelain factories. From 1735 until 1773, the factory produced fine quality soft-paste porcelain wares. French soft-paste porcelains date to the early attempts by European potters to replicate Chinese porcelain by using mixtures of clay and glass frit. Like our pot, the body of the early Mennecy soft-paste wares has a creamy tone. There was no gilding at Mennecy. Instead, like our pot, the rims were painted in tones of pink and purple.
The Mennecy factory under the protection of the Duc de Villeroy, marked many of its porcelains with an incised “”DV”” on the underside. Our pot is marked with an incised “”DV””; however, an image of the “”DV”” mark does not have enough resolution to post here.
Provenance: Estate of John F. Ball, Greenwich, CT.
Dimensions: 3.75″” tall x 3″” diameter
Condition: Excellent
Out of stock










