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Plate from the 'Rousseau' service

(French, 1833–1914)
between 1866-1875
Medium/TechniqueGlazed earthenware with colored enamels
DimensionsDiameter: 25 cm (9 13/16 in.)
Credit LineH. E. Bolles Fund
Accession number2021.1064
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsCeramics
Description

This plate is from a large ceramic service designed by the French artist Félix Bracquemond, called the “Rousseau” service. Named for the patron, Eugène Rousseau, for whom Bracquemond designed the service in 1866, this is the first example of Japonisme in French decorative arts. As such, it is a landmark object in the history of the influence and role of Japanese art and culture in European decorative arts, with influence on important movements like Art Nouveau, Art Deco, and Arts and Crafts.

Bracquemond is one of the critical figures in French printmaking, design, and decorative arts of the second half of the 19th century. His initial successes at the Exposition Universelle in 1855 propelled him to the center of Parisian artistic life. As one of the first artists to become interested in Japanese prints, he began incorporating elements such as asymmetrical designs and naturalistic motifs into his work. Rousseau, a fellow ceramicist and glassmaker, was an early proponent of Japonisme and supported Bracquemond’s interest in the material. Bracquemond drew inspiration directly from Japanese prints, specifically Hokusai’s "Kwacho Garden" and "Manga", and Hiroshige’s "Ukiyo Ryusai Gwafa" and individual prints by Hiroshige as well as other sources, many of which are in the MFA’s unrivalled collection of Japanese prints.

ProvenanceAbout last quarter of the 20th century, purchased in France by a private collector [see note]; September 23, 2014, anonymous (private collector) sale, Swann Auction Galleries, New York, lot 20, sold to Susan Schulman Fine Art, Inc., New York; 2021, sold by Susan Schulman Fine Art, Inc. to the MFA. (Accession date: December 15, 2021)

NOTE: The consignor was an (unknown) academic from France, who purchased the service decades earlier.