Sèvres Porcelain
H.4 W.6 1/8 Dia.5 in
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Each with the factory marks in blue with the date-letter S for 1771.
The dinner service from which these pieces come was made for Madame du Barry and has decoration described in the Sèvres archives as of 'petits vases et guirlandes'. This wine glass cooler shape is one that is not found in very many dinner services however unusually Madame du Barry had 36 of them in this service costing 60 livres each, intended for each diner to rinse and cool their wine glass in iced water.
The design attributed to Augustin de Saint-Aubin survives in the Bibliothèque de l'Institut, Paris annotated 'Projet d'un service pour être exécuté pour Mde du Barry, 1770' [Ms 2057]. This is the first service bearing the owner's monogram made at Sèvres, and also the first to feature neo-classical vases. Such provision of a design from a Paris-based artist is very unusual indeed.
The Comtesse du Barry, mistress of Louis XV towards the end of his reign, had a variety of Sèvres services but this one bearing her initials has been associated with her through the 19th century before the Sèvres archives allowed identification of other porcelain in her collection in the mid-20th century.
The service was delivered to Madame du Barry on 29 August 1771 and was probably used for the inaugural reception which she gave for Louis XV in her new pavillon at the Château of Louveciennes in September of that year.
As David Peters has noted, this dinner service is mentioned in her posthumous inventory dated for 24th August 1794 as 'Service fond blanc à guirlandes et petits Vases avec la Chiffre DB' following her execution. So, she kept it in use for the twenty years from its creation to the end of her life.
15 of these wine glass coolers of Madame du Barry's were sold from the Earl of Lonsdale's collection (along with a huge amount more of this service) at Christie's, London, 13-18th June 1887. Seven of them, perhaps, but not necessarily from the Lonsdale group, were sold at Christie's, London, 30th October 1947.
Other seaux échancré from this service in known collections today include one in the Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, CT, USA; four in the Beit Collection at Russborough, Northern Ireland. One pair and third one sold by Adrian Sassoon to UK collectors in 2015 and 2021.