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Flora Danica: A dinner service fit for kings
Flora Danica was first commissioned by Crown Prince Frederik at the
Royal Copenhagen Porcelain Manufactory which was founded in Denmark, in
1775. According to tradition the service was intended as a gift for the
Empress Catherine the Great of Russia, an enthusiastic collector of
porcelain. Porcelain had become a matter of royal prestige since the
recipe for this 'white gold' had been rediscovered in Europe in the
beginning of the century. The 18th century was also the age of
enlightenment and sensitivity, and Europe was
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A Fruit Basket |
fascinated with botany. It was for this reason that the king chose to
have Danish flora and fauna depicted on this gift service.
The creation of the Flora Danica service was an immense task. It became
the life's work of one of the most gifted artists of the late 18th
century, and one of the greatest porcelain painters, Johann Christoph
Bayer. The long and laborious process commenced in 1790 and took 12
years to complete. The service was made up of 1,802 different pieces of
hand-moulded and hand-painted porcelain.
The Mewar Collection, (housed in Fateh Prakash Palace) itself |
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A tray |
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acquired from a royal household, is a revival of the old dinner service
which follows the classical pearl form - a design rich in shapes of
flowers and leaves, indented rims, numerous lace-like carvings and
meticulous, intricate details. Each piece is decorated with an
individual and highly articulated plant - complete with flower, leaves,
stem, root and fruit. With distinctive and sensitive brush strokes Bayer
had carefully reproduced motifs culled from the Danish botanical
encyclopaedia Flora Danica. Of the original Flora Danica service
delivered in 1803, 1,530 survive to the present day. Part of this
service still graces the royal table of Queen Margrethe II on state
occasions at Christiansborg Palace in Copenhagen. Other pieces from this
rare collection are exhibited at museums in Denmark.
Distinctive and unique, Flora Danica is still considered the flower of
Danish decorative art and a distinguished specimen of Danish design:
clearly formulated, aesthetically executed and sovereign in its
individuality. Connoisseurs are struck by the extraordinary decorative
power of the painting, by the interplay between lustrous colour and warm
gilding, and by the vigorous and sure modelling of the individual
pieces. The late Princess Grace of Monaco wrote in her book on flowers:
"One of the most delicate and beautiful porcelain patterns is the famous
Flora Danica from Denmark." |
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A Vegetable Dish |
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