Plate
Date1759-1769
Artist/Maker
Chelsea Porcelain Manufactory
(1745-1769)
Attributed to
James Giles
(1718-1780)
MediumSoft-paste porcelain
DimensionsD: 8 1/4"; H: 1"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1960-513
DescriptionSoft-paste porcelain plate with scalloped rim. There is a line of gilding on the rim. The plate is decorated with three exotic birds in bright overglaze enamels. The central and largest bird is standing on a rock amongst large leaves. Its crown, neck, shoulders, and upper wing are orange. The tail is buff and purple and the breast is buff. The bird to the left is perched on a tree with purple berries. It is painted yellow and purple. The bird on the right is perched on a tree with orange pinnate leaves. It is painted purple, blue, and violet.Label TextThe exotic bird decoration on this set of plates may have been executed in the workshop of James Giles, an independent ceramic decorator who worked in London and who was responsible for the decoration of many pieces of Chelsea, Bow, and Worcester porcelain as well as wares from other English and Chinese factories. Giles must have had painters of varying abilities working for him, for several hands are detectable in at least one of the large Chelsea services painted at his workshop. The birds painted on the cover of one of the soup tureens of the Mecklenburg-Strelitz service, ordered by King George III and Queen Charlotte for her brother, the duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, are not the same quality as those on the bowl. The service, which includes several hundred pieces, required the efforts of many artisans.
Although the "disheveled birds" are the designs most readily attributed to the Giles studio, other types of decoration--including sliced fruit, landscapes, and "Teniers figures"--have also been credited to his artists.
InscribedNo
MarkingsBrown anchor painted in center of reverse.
ProvenancePurchased from: Roger Warner Antiques, Burford, England
Exhibition(s)
1759-1769
1759-1769
1759-1769
1759-1769
1759-1769
1750-1765
1780-1785
1770-1780
1840-1880
1744-1749
1750-1752
1768-1775