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2008 - Sculptural Splendour

It is with great pleasure that we introduce you to our collection of porcelain entitled Sculptural Splendour. Many of the pieces have been chosen with the clear theme of the modeller’s art and his representation of natural imagery. It is a triumph of Nature’s zest that is captured and tooled by man’s imagination and enhanced to create both anthropomorphic
and fantastical forms, redolent of an age of peace, prosperity, and plenty during the eighteenth century. These forms are in turn loaded with symbols of love and desire to be strewn across tables and pleasure domes of the wealthy during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, to startling effect.

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2006 - The Elegance of Porcelain (View Online)

We are delighted to present our 2006 catalogue 'The Elegance of Porcelain'. We feel particularly fortunate this year to have brought together such varied rare examples of some of the finest eighteenth and nineteenth century English and Continental porcelain, that we have handled for many years. Many of the pieces come from private English collections not seen on the open market within living memory.

For further details, please contact us.

 

2005 - Royal Splendour (View Online)

We are delighted to present our 2005 Exhibition ‘Royal Splendour’. The fourteen pieces in the catalogue have been chosen to illustrate the richness, grandeur and height of style within the early period of each of the four represented European and English manufactories.

The Exhibition starts and centres on the Royal Armorial Chafing dish, cover and stand, this remarkable object was evidently made by Meissen to the personal order of Queen Maria-Josepha to mark the 25th Anniversary, in 1745, of her marriage to Frederick-Augustus Elector of Saxony, King of Poland. Although emblazoned with the arms of the King it is a tribute of an intensely personal sort. The true importance of the commission is revealed in Kaendler’s Taxa report, where the Queen’s personal requirement that Kaendler should be involved in the design of this cabinet piece, is clearly revealed.

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2004 - Splendour of a Golden Age (View Online)

We are simply delighted to present our Autumn selling Exhibition ‘Splendour of a Golden Age’ which includes some of the finest early English porcelain, from three English private collections, to be seen on the open market in recent years. The Exhibition is entirely born out of the Ceramics Fair for it was last year in 2003 that we renewed our acquaintance with Dr. Paul B. Riley, when we Exhibited our collection of early blue and white English porcelain. To many of you the name of Dr. Riley is synonymous with the world of collecting and more especially with his continuing researches into the production at the Chelsea manufactory.

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contact us.

 2004 - Splendour in the Grass (View Online)

We are delighted to present our Exhibition catalogue for 2004 entitled ‘Splendour in the Grass’. It is conceived as a homage to man’s continued interest in all things natural, an ephemeral array of beasts, birds and flowers, immortalised within porcelain but still regarded as symbols of the fragility of life captured and frozen for a single moment by the artists and modellers for our contemplation. Man has held a fascination for the natural world since the dawn of time for we are a single part of the wealth of the living planet and take our place within the ranks of creation itself. We ourselves spring from the grass and will eventually take our place back there within the living fabric of our planet Earth. The Exhibition charts the representation of birds, beasts and flowers within the story of porcelain itself from the
beginning of the eighteenth century.

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2003 - A Private Collection of Early Eighteenth Century English Blue and White Porcelain

This very select private collection of early Blue and White predominantly Worcester porcelain has come to us from beyond our shores and has been diligently built up from its conception in the mid 1960s, from the act of buying a single Lowestoft pickle leaf, through careful and considered choices and an emphasis on quality to the addition, in later years, of its more important and splendid items of the Worcester factory’s early production. It was the aesthetic appeal and the importance of the artistic traditions together with a keen interest in the social history of the eighteenth century, which led the collector to the fine porcelain fashioned in this country in the mid eighteenth century.

For further details, please contact us.