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Co. Circa 1835
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Antique Staffordshire Porcelain Leopard Figure Samuel Alcock
Co. Circa 1835
$680
£518.17
€597.60
CA$965.80
A$1,037.70
CHF 556.72
MX$12,225.32
About the Item
This antique porcelain figure of a leopard is small but ferocius.
It is modeled grappling with a piece of meat in its jaws while recumbent on a rocky base that is picked out in green and edged with a gilt line.
The leopard's coat is washed in yellow with black markings,
It was made by Samuel Alcock in Burslem, Staffordshire, England, circa 1835.
Alcock was renowned for producing fine-quality porcelain animals, and this leopard figure is one his finest creations.
It is a little gem!
Dimensions: 3.5 inches long x 1.8" wide x 2" tall
Marks: an impressed factory mark and # "256."
Condition: Excellent
Price: $780
Ref: Geoffrey Godden illustrates a very similar pair of leopards, noting the excellent quality of the porcelain and coloring, in his chapter on Alcock in Staffordshire Porcelain (1983), p.308, fig.471.
Also Ref:D G Rice English Porcelain Animals of the 19th Century pg. 180, where Rice states,"...Yellow with black spots, recumbent on a rocky green base edged with a gilt line,... eating a piece of meat."
Background: Samuel Alcock (1799–1848) was an English pottery manufacturer who operated as Samuel Alcock
Co in Burslem, Staffordshire. In 1828, Alcock developed his own business and began work on the Hill Top site in Cobridge, Burslem.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has a group of the company's designs in watercolor.
- Creator:Samuel Alcock Co. (Manufacturer)
- Dimensions:Height: 2 in (5.08 cm)Width: 3.5 in (8.89 cm)Depth: 1.8 in (4.58 cm)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:Circa 1835
- Condition:
- Seller Location:Katonah, NY
- Reference Number:Seller: SKU000010311stDibs: LU866540530812
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Scholarly Analysis and Authentication
The figure is made from laminated clays of contrasting colors, known as laid agate, a technique perfected in Staffordshire workshops during the 1740s and 1750s.
Strata of buff, pale grey, and iron-bearing brown clay were rolled together, pressed into a two-part mold, and luted along the spine before firing.
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Sodium vapor combined with the silica of the clay to form a thin, glassy coating.
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Sotheby’s (2015) — “A Staffordshire agateware cat-form candlestick, circa 1755.
Christie’s, London 2010, lot 82.
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Chipstone Foundation, Marbled Agateware: Techniques and Identification, 2005.
Henry Sandon, Staffordshire Pottery, 1970, pp. 52–54.
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