Lecturer: Anne Haworth
Sèvres was the most illustrious and innovative porcelain factory in 18th Century France, employing brilliant artisans as painters, modellers, gilders and technicians. Spectacular vases and finely decorated dining services made at Sèvres added lustre and glamour to the grandest of state rooms and the most intimate of boudoirs in the nearby Palace of Versailles. These objects of desire were sought after by the nobility during Europe’s Ancien Régime, by English collectors such as the Prince Regent and, generations later, by a new moneyed aristocracy in America’s ‘Gilded Age’. However, the origins of this most fashionable porcelain factory were very different.



