Antique
Continental
Porcelain 1
Continental porcelain
Continental porcelain differs essentially from English
in that it was in nearly every instance, either at
first or eventually, hard-paste. Even those factories
that began with pseudo-glass soft-paste turned in
the end to true hard porcelain. Marks are much more
frequent than on English pieces, but have to be treated
with suspicion as they stayed in use over long periods
and were copied freely. The supremacy of Dresden
induced many makers, on the Continent as well as
in England, to mark their wares with the crossed
swords or with the AR monogram.
Just as in England there were 'outside decorators',
in Germany and Austria there were 'Hausmalers' (literally,
home painters), who bought unpainted ware and decorated
it themselves in their own individual styles. Many
of these men were excellent artists and did work
of high quality, but they were not popular with the
factories. At Dresden, all pieces sold in the white
after about 1760 had one or more short lines cut
through the crossed swords to indicate that they
were imperfect. While many of the imperfections were
only slight, they were sufficient to make the ware
unfit for decorating by the factory painters.
It should be remembered that many Continental factories
are still in production and reuse eighteenth-century
moulds of their own and other makers' wares. Often
they mark them appropriately, and it is far from
easy for the novice to distinguish between old and
new. Careful examination of genuine pieces and a
comparison of them with modern copies, are the only
ways to recognize and learn the difference. It may
comfort the puzzled beginner to know that fifty years
ago a director of the Sevres factory confessed he
was completely unable to distinguish old from new
when some doubtful pieces from the Victoria and Albert
Museum were submitted for his opinion.
Continental Porcelain Factories
Germany
Dresden ( Saxony), East Germany
In the year 1707, Johann Bottger, an alchemist,
was investigating the possibility of making gold,
when his services were enlisted to discover what
seemed at the time an equally insoluble secret; how
to make porcelain to rival the Oriental ware then
being imported into Europe in quantity. As a result
of his successful experiments in making a hard red
ware, he was able to make a white one, and on 23rd
January 1710 the Royal Saxon Manufactory was
established. It was in an old fortress at Meissen,
near Dresden in Saxony, and there it remained for
nearly 150 years. The porcelain produced since 1710
is called Meissen in Germany and the United States,
Dresden in England, and Saxe in France, and was the
first to be made in Europe in the Oriental manner
from a fused mixture of minerals.
From the start, both the red and the white wares
were made in quantity, but examples of them are very
rare today. The former were often decorated on the
lapidary's wheel, the polished parts appearing as
if glazed. A few figures were made, but the output
was principally cups and bowls, and many of these
in white porcelain had coloured decoration.
Bottger died in 1719, and from then onwards there
were numerous changes in both personnel and
output, culminating in the appointment of Johann
Kandler as modeller in 1731. It was Kandler's creation
of dozens of brilliant figures and groups that spread
the fame of Meissen throughout Europe, and inspired
modellers of every nation.
As well as figures, Dresden made tablewares, and
initiated a series of tureens and covered pots in
the form of animals, fishes, birds, flowers, fruit
and vegetables. Proof of the success of all these
is the fact that so many factories, at one time or
another, imitated not only the designs but also added
a fake crossed-swords mark. The latter often on wares
far removed from anything likely to have come from
Germany, but taking full advantage of the high reputation
that country enjoyed for making fine china.
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Continental
Factories
It should be remembered that many Continental factories
are still in production and reuse eighteenth-century
moulds of their own and other makers' wares. Often
they mark them appropriately, and it is far from
easy for the novice to distinguish between old and
new.
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