Antique Staffordshire Porcelain Leopard Figure Samuel Alcock & Co. Circa 1835

$680.00

This antique porcelain figure of a leopard is small but ferocious.
It is modeled grappling with something in its jaws, recumbent on a rocky base that is picked out in green and edged with a gilt line.
The leopard’s coat is washed in yellow with black markings,
It was made by Samuel Alcock in Burslem, Staffordshire, England, circa 1835.
Alcock was renowned for producing fine-quality porcelain animals, and this leopard figure is one of the best.
It is a quality piece with good attention to detail, a little gem!
Dimensions: 3.5 inches long x 1.8″ wide x 2″ tall

Marks: an impressed factory mark and # “256.”

Condition: Excellent

Ref: Geoffrey Godden illustrates a very similar pair of leopards, noting the excellent quality of the porcelain and coloring, in his chapter on Alcock in Staffordshire Porcelain (1983), p.308, fig.471.

In stock

Background

Samuel Alcock (1799–1848) was an English pottery manufacturer who operated as Samuel Alcock & Co in Burslem, Staffordshire. In 1828, Alcock developed his own business and began work on the Hill Top site in Cobridge, Burslem.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has a group of the company’s designs in watercolor.

 


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