SynonymsBot
Synonyms for sèvres_porcelain or Related words with sèvres_porcelain
meissen_porcelain
limoges_porcelain
faience
gilt_bronze_mounts
ormolu
gobelins_tapestry
porcelain
faïence
gobelins
rené_lalique
gobelins_manufactory
savonnerie
soft_paste_porcelain
marquetry
gobelin
ébéniste
christofle
manufactury
nymphenburg_porcelain
goyard
limoges_enamel
lalique
baccarat_crystal
chinaware
mintons
hard_paste_porcelain
porcelaine
perfume_bottles
ébénistes
manufactory
enamels
majolica
musée_des_arts_décoratifs
pierre_philippe_thomire
louis_majorelle
tableware
clérissy
marchands_merciers
maiolica
sèvres_porcelain_manufactory
jean_patou
tapestries
sevres
delftware
beauvais_tapestry
barbedienne
niderviller
majorelle
boiseries
bonnat
Examples of "sèvres_porcelain"
He drew views of the monuments of Rouen and then worked at the
Sèvres
porcelain
factory.
Espérance was later employed for several years as a painter by the
Sèvres
porcelain
factory.
From 1804 to 1807, he painted porcelain figurines for the famous
Sèvres
porcelain
factory.
The Duchess was known to patronise the
Sèvres
Porcelain
Manufactory, commissioning notable works by Jean-Charles-François Leloy.
Chelsea was known for its figures. From about 1760 its inspiration was drawn more from
Sèvres
porcelain
than Meissen.
From 1872 until his death in 1889 he was Chief of Collections at the
Sèvres
porcelain
factory.
A
Sèvres
porcelain
basket to hold flowers or fruit, now held in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, was designed by Berthault in 1814.
Louis-Simon Boizot (1743–1809) was a French sculptor whose models for biscuit figures for
Sèvres
porcelain
are better-known than his large-scale sculptures.
The Rouen paste was very light, lighter than any other French make except
Sèvres
porcelain
, and clearly less amber than Saint-Cloud porcelain.
Hynais worked for the
Sèvres
porcelain
firm between 1889 and 1892 as a graphics artist, and became a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts, Prague in 1894.
The Collection numbers nearly 5,500 objects and is best known for its quality and breadth of eighteenth-century French paintings,
Sèvres
porcelain
and French furniture.
As a draughtsman, Valois produced a drawing of the triumphal arrival of celebrated works of art from the Vatican in Paris, 1798, that was copied on a
Sèvres
porcelain
"Etruscan" vase ("Vase Étrusque à rouleaux") in 1813.
The Wallace Collection is split into six curatorial departments, Pictures and Miniatures, Ceramics and Glass, Sculpture and Works of Art, Arms and Armour,
Sèvres
porcelain
and Gold Boxes and Furniture.
Lignereux builds a strong relationship with Manufacture de Sèvres. In addition to the agreement in London in the 1790s, maison Lignereux acts as a retailer of
Sèvres
porcelain
in Paris in 1800-1801 and from 1802 to 1804.
In France, the production of
Sèvres
porcelain
was tightly controlled, so that painting was under strict factory control. By contrast, Limoges porcelain has always maintained a strong tradition of "atelier" decoration, whether near Limoges or at Paris.
Square Félix-Desruelles was built in the same year along the south wall of the church. The little square is dominated by a colorful enameled gateway of the Pavilion of the
Sèvres
porcelain
factory from the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900.
Brongniart's son Alexandre went on to become a respected geologist and director of the famous
Sèvres
porcelain
factory. In turn, his son Adolphe Theodore Brongniart became a famous botanist known as the father of paleobotany and a recipient of the Wollaston Medal in science text.
The Treaty of Sèvres () was one of a series of treaties that the Central Powers signed after their defeat in World War I. Hostilities had already ended with the Armistice of Mudros. The treaty was signed on 10 August 1920, in an exhibition room at the Manufacture nationale de
Sèvres
porcelain
factory in Sèvres, France.
In the old royal château, a porcelain manufactory was established in 1740, specializing in imitations of Meissen porcelain and naturalistic flowers, which were incorporated into bouquets under the direction of Parisian "marchands-merciers". The Vincennes porcelain factory continued until 1756, when the production was transferred to new buildings at Sèvres, initiating the career of world-famous
Sèvres
porcelain
.
After this initial period, up to the end of the 18th century, French porcelain manufactories would progressively abandon their Chinese and Japanese designs, to become more French in character. Vincennes soft-paste porcelain started to display original French inspiration towards its last years of operation, after which the abundant, varied, and original productions of
Sèvres
porcelain
continued the trend.