The mastery of a hard-paste porcelain technology in Dresden in 1708 was a major natural philosophical achievement for the European Enlightenment. From the outset, the material possessed a representative function at the Saxon court, where it served to promote the power and cultural prestige of the Wettin dynasty. As porcelain factories were established at courts across Europe, however, the material's signifying role became complex. On the one hand, its alchemical associations aligned it with unfettered princely power in the realm of the absolutist court. On the other, its origins in laboratory investigation could indicate a princely engagement with the Enlightenment pursuit of scientific knowledge. These contradictory associations reached an...
The essays in this volume show that Versailles was not the static creation of one man, but a hugely ...
This paper deals with a famous private natural history collection of the court, transformed to a pub...
The culture at the ducal court of Sigmund and Albrecht IV of Bavaria-Munich was characterised by a c...
The technique of manufacturing of creamware and porcelain was discovered in Europe during the 18th c...
In this thesis, I examine Augustus II the Strong's porcelain collection in the Japanisches Palais, a...
An inaccessible material both in terms of technology and manufacture for the aristocratic classes an...
This chapter explores how, in the writings of the Jesuit father François-Xavier d’Entrecolles (1664–...
UID/HIS/04666/2019In our research on Chinese export porcelain for the European market throughout the...
Chinese porcelain is not simply a material product, but a transcultural medium, with a long history ...
The phenomenon of princely and scientific collections that proliferated in Europe during the sixtee...
The main scene on the vase depicts a man seated at a tea table with a display of porcelain on a buff...
The study analyses two bundles of official documents from the Moravian Provincial Archive in Brno an...
review of Splendour & Power: Imperial Treasures from Vienna (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge
In recent years, historians have rediscovered the religious dimensions of the Enlightenment. This vo...
The paper questions the complex relations between Jansenism, Catholic Enlightenment, and visual cult...
The essays in this volume show that Versailles was not the static creation of one man, but a hugely ...
This paper deals with a famous private natural history collection of the court, transformed to a pub...
The culture at the ducal court of Sigmund and Albrecht IV of Bavaria-Munich was characterised by a c...
The technique of manufacturing of creamware and porcelain was discovered in Europe during the 18th c...
In this thesis, I examine Augustus II the Strong's porcelain collection in the Japanisches Palais, a...
An inaccessible material both in terms of technology and manufacture for the aristocratic classes an...
This chapter explores how, in the writings of the Jesuit father François-Xavier d’Entrecolles (1664–...
UID/HIS/04666/2019In our research on Chinese export porcelain for the European market throughout the...
Chinese porcelain is not simply a material product, but a transcultural medium, with a long history ...
The phenomenon of princely and scientific collections that proliferated in Europe during the sixtee...
The main scene on the vase depicts a man seated at a tea table with a display of porcelain on a buff...
The study analyses two bundles of official documents from the Moravian Provincial Archive in Brno an...
review of Splendour & Power: Imperial Treasures from Vienna (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge
In recent years, historians have rediscovered the religious dimensions of the Enlightenment. This vo...
The paper questions the complex relations between Jansenism, Catholic Enlightenment, and visual cult...
The essays in this volume show that Versailles was not the static creation of one man, but a hugely ...
This paper deals with a famous private natural history collection of the court, transformed to a pub...
The culture at the ducal court of Sigmund and Albrecht IV of Bavaria-Munich was characterised by a c...