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French Faïence

Collection Info
French Faïence

This collection surveys the production of some of the most important centres of production of tin-glazed earthenware in France, where the wares were known as faïence. Knowledge of tin-glazing reached France in the second half of the sixteenth century when Italian artisans settled in the cities of Rouen, Lyon and Nevers. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, production spread to other centres such as Marseille, Moustier and Sceaux.

Tin-glazed earthenware was used in the making of both functional and ornamental objects. Pieces in the Gardiner Museum’s collection also show how faïence makers first worked under the influence of Italian maiolica before turning to Chinese porcelain as the main source of inspiration.

Faïence provided a less expensive alternative to Chinese porcelain, and to the European hard-paste and soft-paste porcelain produced in the eighteenth century. The discovery of kaolin sources in France which enabled the production of more durable hard-paste porcelain, and the spread of less expensive creamware, caused the decline of the faïence industry in the late eighteenth century.

The collection of French faïence was donated by Pierre Karch and Mariel O’Neill- Karch.

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Rectangular charger manufactured by Guillibaud.
Artist / Maker: Jean-Baptiste Guillibaud Manufacture
18th Century
Object number: G14.4.4
Jug with a representation of St. Peter
mid 18th Century
Object number: G14.4.22
Lobed faience plate
Artist / Maker: Poterat
c.1700 - 1750
Object number: G12.14.11
Lobed faience plate
Artist / Maker: Poterat
c.1700 - 1750
Object number: G12.14.10
Plate with Aphrodite, Cupid and Satyrs
19th Century
Object number: G12.14.13
Armorial Plate with Cornucopia
19th Century, in the style of 18th century Rouen
Object number: G12.14.12
Feeding Cup
early 18th Century
Object number: G14.4.20
Dish with Armorial of the Poterat Family
Artist / Maker: Poterat
early 18th Century
Object number: G15.8.2
Charger
Artist / Maker: Poterat
late 17th Century
Object number: G15.8.1
Pair of Plates from the Service of Bernard d’Avesnes
Artist / Maker: Jean-Baptiste Guillibaud Manufacture
c. 1730
Object number: G12.14.17.1-2