A Barr, Flight & Barr Worcester Carruthers Service Centrepiece c.1804

A Barr, Flight & Barr Worcester Carruthers Service Centrepiece c.1804

Code: 11080

Dimensions:

W: 26cm (10.2")L: 35cm (13.8")

£950.00 Approx $1187.5, €1109.81

A large Barr, Flight & Barr Worcester Porcelain Centrepiec c.1804-1813 painted in a rich ‘Japan‘ pattern, with elaborate panels of a fenced garden, pierced rockwork and flowering branches separated by blue diaper bands. In its centre is the crest of a gilt rampant lion, within a belt inscribed SINCERE. Marked on the back with “Barr Flight & Barr, Royal Porcelain Works Worcester. London House Flight & Barr Coventry street, established 1751” with the royal crown and Prince of Wales feathers and the encircling words: “Manufacturer to Their Majesties Prince of Wales and Royal Family”.

Condition: Some light wear to the gilding and some light surface scratches. Small hairline crack to the handle which only shows on the reverse. Small stain mark to the foot rim. 

This dish comes from a service provided for Colonel Pauling Carruthers of Painswick, Gloucestershire, which has been several times sold through Sotheby‘s: on 4 July 1964 in London (lot 146), 11 April 1997 in New York (lot 317) and most recently a part dessert service (6 place settings) on 12 August 2020 in New York (Lot 293) which sold for $11,340. A variation of the pattern, bearing the crest and feathers of the Prince of Wales, made circa 1807, is illustrated in Henry Sandon, Flight and Barr Worcester Porcelain 1783-1840, p. 19. 

Condition: A small amount of wear to the gilding

During the late 18th and early 19th centuries Chinese porcelain decorated with the family Coat of Arms was a great status symbol. The porcelain took years to arrive and was sometimes full of mistakes. Worcester produced a magnificent alternative, becoming the height of fashion in the early 19th century. Customers included Tzar Alexander I, The Duke of York, King George III, King William IV, The Duke of Clarence, The Imam of Muscat, The Marquis of Buckingham and the Nabob of Oude. The Prince of Wales bought at least six services including two Imari dessert services in 1807 and awarded the company his Royal Warrant in the same year.