Thursday, August 18, 2016

Florence's Doccia Porcelain Manufactory

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Mermaid
ca. 1750-55
porcelain
Metropolitan Museum of Art

At the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York there are six of these mermaids and mermen and mer-children which have somehow survived in their glazed porcelain fragility since the middle of  the 18th century.

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Merman
ca. 1750-55
porcelain
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Merchild
ca. 1750-55
porcelain
Metropolitan Museum of Art

"In the 1740s Carlo Ginori, the founder of the porcelain factory at Doccia, acquired a number of sculpted models in wax, terracotta, and plaster made by some of the leading Florentine baroque sculptors. The challenge and reward for the porcelain modelers at the Ginori factory was to overcome the technical difficulties of this fragile new medium and to retain the dynamism and balance of the original models."

 from Metropolitan Museum curatorial notes by Jeffrey H. Munger, 2014

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Bonbon dish
ca. 1750-55
porcelain
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Sweetmeat dish with sphinx
1750s
porcelain
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Sugar Bowl
ca. 1750-55
porcelain
Meropolitan Museum of Art

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Figure of a Turk
1760s
porcelain
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Figure of Pomona (or Summer) as candlestick
ca. 1760
porcelain
British Museum

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Figure of Ceres (or Summer)
1760s
porcelain
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Youth dancing
1770s
porcelain
British Museum

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Youth dancing
1770s
porcelain
British Museum

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Chastisement of Cupid
1770s
porcelain
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Jupiter cameo
ca. 1750
porcelain
British Museum

Doccia Manufactory, Florence
Abduction of Prosperine
ca. 1750
porcelain
Metropolitan Museum of Art