Two Shell-Shaped Fruit Bowls (<em>compotiers à coquille</em>)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Painted trays—France—18th century | Gilding—France—18th century | Decoration and ornament—Plant forms—France—18th century | Flowers in art | Fruit in art | Plants in art
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | fruit bowls | gilding-technique | porcelain painting (image-making) | flower (motif) | floral patterns | plant-derived motifs | fruit (plant components)
35mm color slide of two shell-shaped fruit bowls (Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory). Each dish has a dark green ground color with a large white shaped reserve at the center, containing multi-colored bouquets of flowers and fruit. The central reserve is edged with gilded scrolls, foliage, and cartouches containing trelliswork patterns. The white handles of the dishes have feathered gilding. The bowls have a painter’s mark for Vavasseur <em>aîné</em> (the elder; active 1753–70), a “painter of flowers” (Tardy 1981, 569). The number 17 is handwritten on the slide.
<br />Find more about Vavasseur and painters' marks in the <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/exhibits/show/fritzsche-porcelain-collection/home">Fritzsche Porcelain Exhibit</a>.
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Dr. Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
1758 (date of object)
September 1982 (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
<p>From Dr. Fritzsche’s Collector’s Notes: “Provenance: Sotheby’s, London November 26, 1963, no. 88, ‘Property of the Rt. Hon. The Earl of Ulchester'; later pictured in ‘Coronation Exhibition,’ The Antique Porcelain Company, London; subsequently collection Nelson Rockefeller, New York, Sotheby’s, November 4, 1980, pictured, no. 252. We acquired them from Winifred Williams" (Dr. Ulrich Fritzsche, “Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection of Vincennes–Sèvres Porcelain,” unpublished manuscript, Seattle Art Museum Library Archives, 2018). The complete Collector’s Notes are available for viewing <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/items/show/2991">here</a>.</p>
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Mark for Two Shell-Shaped Fruit Bowls (<em>compotiers à coquille</em>, slide 17)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Painted trays—France—18th century | Porcelain—Marks
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | fruit bowls | porcelain marks
35mm color slide of a porcelain mark on one of the fruit bowls in Slide 17. The mark is for Vavasseur <em>aîné</em> (the elder; active 1753–70), a “painter of flowers” (Tardy 1981, 569). The number 17 is handwritten on the slide.
<br />Find more about Vavasseur and painters' marks in the <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/exhibits/show/fritzsche-porcelain-collection/home">Fritzsche Porcelain Exhibit</a>.
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Dr. Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
1758 (date of object)
July 1986 (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
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Filename: Fritzsche_Slide_17_Mark.jpg
Knife Handle with Green Ribands (<em>manche de couteau, à décor rubans verts à pois d’or</em>)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Flatware—France—18th century | Cutlery—France—18th Century | Knives—France—18th century | Gilding—France—18th century | Flowers in art
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | cutlery | knives | gilding-technique | porcelain painting (image-making) | flower (motif)
35mm color slide of a knife handle (Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory). The white ground color is overlaid with a latticework of gilt-trimmed, green bands, a style known as “green ribands” (<em>rubans verts</em>). In the interwoven spaces of the green ribbons are paintings of blue, red, and yellow flowers. The green riband design is very similar to that in “Plate with Green Ribands” (<em>assiette à rubans verts</em>, slide 19) and “Two Plates with Green Ribands” (<em>assiettes à rubans verts</em>, slide 24).
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Dr. Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
18th century (date of object)
20th century (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
From Dr. Fritzsche’s Collector’s Notes: “Christie’s, London, no. 103, February 7, 1984, had an English silver gilt blade. Bernard Dragesco, written communication June 1, 1988, tried unsuccessfully to locate the buyer of the second knife handle, originally part [of] the lot…. Knife exhibited ‘Louis XV and Madame de Pompadour – A Love Affair with Style,’ 1990, The Dixon Gallery and Gardens” (Dr. Ulrich Fritzsche, “Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection of Vincennes–Sèvres Porcelain,” unpublished manuscript, Seattle Art Museum Library Archives, 2018). The complete Collector’s Notes are available for viewing <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/items/show/2991">here</a>.
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Plate with Green Ribands (<em>assiette à rubans verts</em>)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Plates (Tableware)—France—18th century | Gilding—France—18th century | Decoration and ornament—Plant forms—France—18th century | Flowers in art | Plants in art
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | decorative plates | plates (general, dishes) | porcelain painting (image-making) | gilding-technique | flower (motif) | floral patterns | plant-derived motifs
35mm color slide of a plate (Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory). The white ground color is encircled by a border of interwoven, broad green ribbons, known as “green ribands” (<em>rubans verts</em>), whose edges are highlighted by a delicate line of gilding. The plate is decorated with festoons of multi-colored flowers, both in the center of its white ground and within the interwoven spaces of the green ribands, while the rim is adorned with gold flower sprays. The green ribands here are similar to those on the “Two Plates with Green Ribands” (<em>assiettes à rubans verts</em>, slide 24), but here two ribbons are interlaced, in contrast to the single green bands in slide 24. This green riband design is also found on “Knife Handle with Green Ribands (<em>manche de couteau, à décor rubans verts à pois d’or</em>, slide 18). This plate is from a service produced for Maria Theresa (1717–80) (Eriksen and De Bellaigue 1987, 307–8). The number 19 is handwritten on the slide.
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Dr. Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
1758 (date of object)
May 1990 (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
From Dr. Fritzsche’s Collector’s Notes: “According to B. Dragesco our plate is now in the Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor, England” (Dr. Ulrich Fritzsche, “Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection of Vincennes–Sèvres Porcelain,” unpublished manuscript, Seattle Art Museum Library Archives, 2018). The complete Collector’s Notes are available for viewing <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/items/show/2991">here</a>.
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Knife Handle (<em>manche de couteau</em>)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Flatware—France—18th century | Cutlery—France—18th Century | Knives—France—18th century | Gilding—France—18th century | Flowers in art
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | cutlery | knives | gilding-technique | porcelain painting (image-making) | flower (motif)
35mm color slide of a knife handle (Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory). It has a white ground color, and is painted with small blue, pink, and orange flowers. The edges are gilded. The number 20 is handwritten on the slide.
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Dr. Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
18th century (date of object)
May 1990 (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
From Dr. Fritzsche’s Collector’s Notes: “Our knife was sold November 30, 1981, no. 20, Christie’s, London” (Dr. Ulrich Fritzsche, “Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection of Vincennes–Sèvres Porcelain,” unpublished manuscript, Seattle Art Museum Library Archives, 2018). The complete Collector’s Notes are available for viewing <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/items/show/2991">here</a>.
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Plate (<em>assiette</em>) and Wine Bottle Cooler (<em>seau à bouteille</em>)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Plates (Tableware)—France—18th century | Wine coolers—France—18th century | Gilding—France—18th century | Landscapes on porcelain—France—18th century | Decoration and ornament—Plant forms—France—18th century | Flowers in art | Trees in art | Hunting in art | Oudry, Jean-Baptiste, 1686-1755—Pictorial works
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | decorative plates | plates (general, dishes) | wine coolers (containers) | porcelain painting (image-making) | gilding-technique | landscapes (representations) | flower (motif) | floral patterns | plant-derived motifs | trees | hunting
35mm color slide of a plate and wine bottle cooler (Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory). Each piece has a bright pink ground color, with a painted landscape depicting a hunting scene, set against a white background in the center. The plate also has three oval white medallions in its pink border, each containing multi-colored flowers and bordered with gilt garlands. The numbers 21 and 22 are handwritten on the slide.
<br />Find more information on these hunting scenes, which may have been inspired by Oudry’s tapestries depicting Louis XV, in the <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/exhibits/show/fritzsche-porcelain-collection/home">Fritzsche Porcelain Exhibit</a>.
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Dr. Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
1758 (date of object)
October 1983 (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
From Dr. Fritzsche’s Collector’s Notes: “[The plate] originally, … belonged to a set of 12, [which] Mme. Lair, widow of Michel Joseph Lair, living in the Rue du Roule, Paris, had bought at the factory between October–December 1759. Until his death, Lazare Duvaux had been the marchan[d]-mercier of choice for Mme. de Pompadour. Towards the end of 1759, several pieces ‘à fond rose et décor peint’ and labeled ‘chasse,’ part of a small service, were sold by Mme. Lair, whose buyer in hindsight was no one other than Louis XV, King of France…. We acquired our plate from Winifred Williams, London, who bought it November 30, 1981, at Christie’s, London” (Dr. Ulrich Fritzsche, “Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection of Vincennes–Sèvres Porcelain,” unpublished manuscript, Seattle Art Museum Library Archives, 2018). The complete Collector’s Notes are available for viewing <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/items/show/2991">here</a>.
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Filename: Fritzsche_Slide_21.jpg
Wine Bottle Cooler (<em>seau à bouteille</em>)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Wine coolers—France—18th century | Gilding—France—18th century | Landscapes on porcelain—France—18th century | Decoration and ornament—Plant forms—France—18th century | Trees in art | Hunting in art | Oudry, Jean-Baptiste, 1686-1755—Pictorial works
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | wine coolers (containers) | porcelain painting (image-making) | gilding-technique | landscapes (representations) | floral patterns | plant-derived motifs | trees | hunting
35mm color slide of a wine bottle cooler (Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory). Set against a bright pink ground color is a painted landscape in a white shaped reserve, framed by gilded garlands of scrolls, foliage, and flowers. The landscape is dominated by a majestic tree prominently placed at the center of the picture. Behind and around the tree is a hunting scene with men on horseback, and hunting dogs in pursuit of a stag. These hunting scenes are believed to represent Louis XV on a stag hunt, and may have been inspired by <em>Chasses royales de Louis XV</em> (1733–46), a series of Gobelins tapestries designed by Jean-Baptiste Oudry (1686–1755), and regarded as one of Oudry’s masterpieces ((Huntington n.d., no. 27.52; Fritzsche 2018, 14). The wine cooler has a mark on the bottom, consisting of the letter F followed by a dot, which has not been identified. There is a visible crack in the center of the object.
<br />Find more information on these hunting scenes, Oudry, and Louis XV, in the <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/exhibits/show/fritzsche-porcelain-collection/home">Fritzsche Porcelain Exhibit</a>.
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Dr. Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
1758 (date of object)
September 1982 (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
From Dr. Fritzsche’s Collector’s Notes: “Winifred Williams … had acquired our <em>Seau</em> [on] February 2, 1981, Christie’s, London. Subsequently we acquired it from him. At the Baron Schroeder sale, Christie’s July 5, 1910, no. 42, our <em>Seau</em> was already described as ‘faulty,’ and sold for only 600 pounds compared to the 1500 pounds paid for no. 41, ‘<em>Seau à Verre</em>.’ It appears, that at some time in the past our <em>Seau</em> had been broken in two, and was put back together with several small clamps; Williams had them removed.” (Dr. Ulrich Fritzsche, “Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection of Vincennes–Sèvres Porcelain,” unpublished manuscript, Seattle Art Museum Library Archives, 2018). The complete Collector’s Notes are available for viewing <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/items/show/2991">here</a>.
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Filename: Fritzsche_Slide_22a.jpg
Wine Bottle Cooler (<em>seau à bouteille</em>)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Wine coolers—France—18th century | Gilding—France—18th century | Landscapes on porcelain—France—18th century | Decoration and ornament—Plant forms—France—18th century | Trees in art | Hunting in art | Oudry, Jean-Baptiste, 1686-1755—Pictorial works
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | wine coolers (containers) | porcelain painting (image-making) | gilding-technique | landscapes (representations) | floral patterns | plant-derived motifs | trees | hunting
35mm color slide of a wine bottle cooler (Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory). Set against a bright pink ground color is a painted landscape in a white shaped reserve, framed by gilded garlands of scrolls, foliage, and flowers. This is the verso of the object in Slide 22a, and depicts a similar hunting scene, but without horses or dogs. A group of men with rifles is framed by two trees, the larger of which resembles the tree in Slide 22a. One of the figures is shooting his rifle. These hunting scenes are believed to represent Louis XV on a duck hunt, and may have been inspired by <em>Chasses royales de Louis XV</em> (1733–46), a series of Gobelins tapestries designed by Jean-Baptiste Oudry (1686–1755), and regarded as one of Oudry’s masterpieces (Huntington n.d., no. 27.52; Fritzsche 2018, 14). The wine cooler has a mark on the bottom, consisting of the letter F followed by a dot, which has not been identified. There is a visible crack in the center of the object.
<br />Find more information on these hunting scenes, Oudry, and Louis XV, in the <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/exhibits/show/fritzsche-porcelain-collection/home">Fritzsche Porcelain Exhibit</a>.
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Dr. Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
1758 (date of object)
September 1982 (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
From Dr. Fritzsche’s Collector’s Notes: “Winifred Williams … had acquired our <em>Seau</em> [on] February 2, 1981, Christie’s, London. Subsequently we acquired it from him. At the Baron Schroeder sale, Christie’s July 5, 1910, no. 42, our <em>Seau</em> was already described as ‘faulty,’ and sold for only 600 pounds compared to the 1500 pounds paid for no. 41, ‘<em>Seau à Verre</em>.’ It appears, that at some time in the past our <em>Seau</em> had been broken in two, and was put back together with several small clamps; Williams had them removed.” (Dr. Ulrich Fritzsche, “Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection of Vincennes–Sèvres Porcelain,” unpublished manuscript, Seattle Art Museum Library Archives, 2018). The complete Collector’s Notes are available for viewing <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/items/show/2991">here</a>.
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Filename: Fritzsche_Slide_22b.jpg
Mark for Wine Bottle Cooler (<em>seau à bouteille</em>, slides 22a–b)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Wine coolers—France—18th century | Porcelain—Marks
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | wine coolers (containers) | porcelain marks
35mm color slide of a porcelain mark for the wine-bottle cooler in Slides 22a and 22b. The mark is the letter F followed by a dot, and has not been identified. The number 22 is handwritten on the slide.
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
1758 (date of object)
September 1982 (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
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Filename: Fritzsche_Slide_22_Mark.jpg
Teapot (<em>théière lizonnée à relief</em>)
LCSH: Porcelain, French—18th century—Pictorial works | Porcelain, French—Private collections | Porcelain, French—Sèvres—18th century—Slide collections | Sèvres porcelain—18th century—Pictorial works | Slides (Photography)—Private collections | Fritzsche, Ulrich—Art collections—Pictorial works | Ceramic tableware—France—18th century | Ceramic teapots—France—18th century | Gilding—France—18th century | Relief (Decorative arts)—France—18th century | Flowers in art | Buteux, Charles—Pictorial works
<br />Getty AAT keywords: porcelain (material) | porcelain (visual works) | dinnerware | teapots | gilding-technique | porcelain painting (image-making) | relief (sculpture techniques) | floral patterns | flower (motif)
35mm color slide of a white teapot (Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory). The body of the teapot is adorned with blue painted flowers and white flowers in relief. Dawson describes this décor as “molded in relief with prunus” and notes that the prunus decoration “is based on Chinese eighteenth-century porcelain from Fukein province” (Dawson 1994, 85). The handle and top are gilded. The teapot has a painter’s mark for Charles Buteux, known as Buteux <em>père</em> or <em>aîné</em> (the elder) (1719–82, active 1756–82), a painter and gilder, whose mark was an anchor. He specialized in trophies and attributes (Savill 1988, 3:1007–1009; Eriksen and De Bellaigue 1987, 154 no. 200, 173n200; Tardy 1981, 530). The number 23 is handwritten on the slide.
<br />Find more details on Buteux and painters’ marks in the <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/exhibits/show/fritzsche-porcelain-collection/home">Fritzsche Porcelain Exhibit</a>.
Fritzsche, Ulrich (creator of slide); D’Arms, Ted (photographer); Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory (creator of object)
Dr. Ulrich and Stella Fritzsche Collection
Seattle Art Museum Libraries
1758 (date of object)
20th century (date of slide)
Painter, Kirsten Blythe
These materials may be protected under copyright law and may only be used for educational, teaching, and learning purposes. If intended use is beyond these purposes, it is the sole responsibility of the user to obtain the appropriate copyright permissions.
<p>Dr. Fritzsche’s complete Collector’s Notes are available for viewing <a href="https://samlibraries.omeka.net/items/show/2991">here</a> (Dr. Ulrich Fritzsche, “Ulrich & Stella Fritzsche Collection of Vincennes–Sèvres Porcelain,” unpublished manuscript, Seattle Art Museum Library Archives, 2018). In this document, Dr. Ulrich Fritzsche recounts the details of every object in his collection, such as provenance and historical notes.</p>
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Filename: Fritzsche_Slide_23a.jpg