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This third volume in the Frick Diptych series offers fresh insight
into a pair of candelabra that represent the pinnacle of luxury and
taste in the years prior to the French Revolution. Vignon tells the
fascinating story of these objects that are made of two small white
vases with extraordinary gilt-bronze mounts by Pierre Gouthiere,
the celebrated eighteenth-century French chaser and gilder.
Vignon's essay is paired with a text by De Waal in which he
examines what it is to make, own, and desire such complex objects
A feat of great technical achievement, French faience was
introduced to Lyon in the second half of the sixteenth century by
skilled Italian immigrants: mdash;the French word "faience"
deriving from the northern Italian city of Faenza. Over the next
two centuries, production spread throughout the provinces of
metropolitan France. The fine decoration of French faience draws
inspiration from multiple sources--Italian maiolica, Asian
porcelain, and even contemporary engravings. The forms of its
platters, bowls, plates, and ewers derive mostly from European
ceramics and silver. This complex interplay of influences comes
together in works of great originality.The Knafel Collection of
French faience, the finest in private hands, includes outstanding
examples of Nevers, Rouen, Moustiers, Moulins, and Marseilles
production from the late sixteenth to the mid-eighteenth century.
The quality of these masterpieces almost obscures the fact that
French faience was essentially a provincial art, largely patronized
and commissioned by a local aristocracy and made far from the
centres of political power in Versailles and Paris. In this
stunning new volume, Charlotte Vignon traces the history of French
faience, offering detailed discussions of key centers of
production. Illustrated with more than seventy examples, this
valuable resource testifies to the creativity and beauty of an
engagingly innovative tradition.
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