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Paris is one of the most photographed and photogenic cities on the planet. With a little pocket camera I arrived to record my first ever visit. Converting my prints to digital, and despite scanning at the highest resolution available, the imperfections of these shots became more obvious. I decided to use post processing software to sharpen them, with even sadder results ... and then I applied a watercolour filter. The almost impressionist results were magic. Judge for yourself.

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Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Paris - Sèvres Porcelain Works - Sèvres


Plate CI Sevres
It is an obvious segue from Vincennes to Sèvres, for as already mentioned, the manufacturing tradition of Sèvres porcelain started with the migration of workers from Chantilly to the royal porcelain works at the Château de Vincennes in the 1730s.
Whether or not you personally like the baroque and rococo elaborate style of many traditional Sèvres wares with their richly hued decorative work, you cannot fail to be impressed by the mastery of the manufactory’s artists over the centuries. From vases, urns and chalices destined for the earlier French royal patrons to the numerous dinner services commissioned for Presidents in residence at Washington’s White House in the United States, the quality of goods produced is impeccable.
Moved to these larger quarters in Sèvres in 1756 at the instigation Louis XV and his obviously influential mistress Madame de Pompadour, French porcelain set out to better the standards of German competitors at Meissen and Dresden. Highly prized, and highly priced, early production was extremely limited and affordable only by nobility – the King himself conducting major sales from his residence at Versailles. Most early Sèvres works were of a soft bisque type, unable to compete with the kaolin based hard paste output of the Germans. Interrupted by the Revolution, it was Napoleon’s appointed director Alexandre Brogniart who is today attributed with having saved the Sèvres works from extinction. Brogniart held this post some 47 years. The discovery in 1769 of kaolin deposits in the Perigord region at Limoges (another notable though more modern French producing region of porcelain wares) eliminated the making of soft paste products entirely. The factory is today run under the auspices of the French Ministry of Culture and Communication; such is its national importance.
At the Sèvres works is a museum (founded by Brogniart in 1824) devoted to an incredible collection of historic works and designs; a veritable treat for the eye. There is also a Sèvres shop where collector’s pieces, including some reproduction traditional works may be bought. I treated myself to a much prized plain white bisque medallion of the Emperor Napoleon – one of the very few travel ‘souvenirs’ I have acquired - a Napoleon in my pocket. My visit to Sèvres was intended to be a stopover visit en-route to Versailles. That would have been an injustice, and Versailles had to wait for another day.

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