Plate from Dessert Service: French Marigold

Description

Each dish is decorated with recognizable plants, the names of which are inscribed on the base in both Latin and English. Identifying the blossoms only became customary in the late 18th century when a single piece of porcelain was decorated with one species, and flowers were represented along with leaves, stems, seed pods, and roots. All of this reflects Carolus Linnaeus’s recent invention of a scientific method to categorize all known flora. The decorations on the Derby factory’s products derive from contemporary English botanical publications. For instance, illustrations in William Curtis’s The Botanical Magazine served as models for the French marigold and nettle-leaved bell flower on the dessert service.

Provenance

(Stair & Co., New York); Severance and Greta Millikin, Cleveland, 1953.

Plate from Dessert Service: French Marigold

Derby

c. 1800

Accession Number

1989.189.1

Medium

porcelain

Dimensions

Diameter: 23.4 cm (9 3/16 in.); Overall: 3.4 cm (1 5/16 in.)

Classification

Ceramic

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Bequest of Mrs. Severance A. Millikin