Skip to main content

18th Century European Porcelain

Collection Info
18th Century European Porcelain

In the late seventeenth century, “porcelain fever” broke out in Europe. Princes and wealthy merchants were consumed by the passion to collect and use Asian porcelain. Imported porcelain from China and Japan was expensive and was perceived as a tangible sign of prestige and taste.

It was only after many experiments that porcelain was made in Europe.

Two types of porcelain were made in Europe: high-fired “hard paste” porcelain, first made in China and later in Europe, which contained kaolin, and low-fired “soft-paste” porcelain which did not. All porcelain is white, translucent and resonant; hard-paste porcelain and some varieties of soft-paste can withstand the thermal shock of boiling liquids.

In the 1680s, experiments led to the first commercially viable manufactory of soft-paste porcelain in Europe at Saint-Cloud, outside Paris. It was only after extensive experiments in Saxony by an alchemist, Johann Friedrich Böttger, and a physicist, Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus, that the first European hard-paste porcelain was made, resulting in the founding of the Meissen porcelain manufactory in 1710.

Soft-paste porcelain manufactories were established in France, England, Italy and Spain in the mid-eighteenth century, but eventually the technology of hard-paste porcelain spread and became dominant in continental Europe.

18th Century European Porcelain Collections:

Austrian Porcelain

English Porcelain

French Porcelain

German Porcelain

Italian Porcelain

Swiss Porcelain

Other European Porcelain

Commedia dell'Arte Figures

Hausmaler-decorated porcelain

Scent Bottles

Read MoreRead Less
Sort:
Filters
16 results
Figure of mine administrator
Artist / Maker: Meissen Porcelain Manufactory
c.1750
Object number: G83.1.671
Figure of a miner
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
c.1750
Object number: G83.1.672
The Monkey Orchestra
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
c.1753-1775
Object number: G83.1.675.1-.18
Dancing Harlequin
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
April 1744
Object number: G83.1.923
Mezzetin
Artist / Maker: Johann Joachim Kändler
August 1744
Object number: G83.1.924
Tartaglia
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
September 1744
Object number: G83.1.925
Giangurgolo
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
August 1744
Object number: G83.1.926
Scaramouche
Artist / Maker: Meissen Porcelain Manufactory
June 1744
Object number: G83.1.927
Beltrame
Artist / Maker: Johann Joachim Kändler
August 1744
Object number: G83.1.928
Harlequin "Ancien"
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
September 1744
Object number: G83.1.929
Dottore Boloardo
Artist / Maker: Johann Joachim Kändler
April 1744
Object number: G83.1.930
Dancing Harlequine
Artist / Maker: Meissen Porcelain Manufactory
c.1744
Object number: G83.1.931
Scapin
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
July 1744
Object number: G83.1.933
Columbine with Mask and Castanets
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
c.1744-1747
Object number: G83.1.934
Dancing Harlequin
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
April 1744
Object number: G83.1.935
Pierrot
Artist / Maker: Peter Reinicke
July 1744
Object number: G83.1.937