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French Majolica Cat with Mandolin Pitcher with Blue Ribbon, circa 1890
$1,200
£914.66
€1,054.97
CA$1,704.36
A$1,831.51
CHF 982.71
MX$21,574.10
NOK 12,356.52
SEK 11,287.61
DKK 7,884.40
About the Item
French Majolica cat with mandolin pitcher with blue ribbon, circa 1890.
- Dimensions:Height: 9.7 in (24.64 cm)Width: 4.8 in (12.2 cm)Depth: 6.3 in (16.01 cm)
- Style:French Provincial (In the Style Of)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:1890
- Condition:
- Seller Location:Austin, TX
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU2379320356252
About the Seller
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This charming and unusual figure depicts a seated cat, its body marbled in tones of buff, grey, and warm brown, the patterns flowing like fur beneath a translucent salt glaze.
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As a pair, this cat with candleholder and its companion cat carrying a mouse form a dialogue of light and life—one playful, one practical—representing the Staffordshire potters’ genius for turning everyday subjects into artful curiosities.
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Within the history of English ceramics, agateware animals represent the marriage of experimentation and domestic charm.
They were objects of conversation—proof of a potter’s technical mastery and a household’s refinement.
This cat, with its delicate candleholder, captures that artistic playfulness and innovation.
The glaze’s clarity, the elegant pose, and the subtle marbling make it not only an artifact of mid-18th-century Staffordshire but also a small masterpiece of whimsy and craft.
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.
The cat’s body thus shows true through-body marbling: the veining continues through the thickness of the clay, not merely applied on the surface.
The candle socket, made from a single buff clay rather than agate, was luted to the head before glazing.
This practical choice prevented distortion during firing and was a typical workshop economy seen in other mid-18th-century functional animal forms.
The piece was salt-glazed in a wood- or coal-fired kiln into which common salt was introduced near peak temperature.
Sodium vapor combined with the silica of the clay to form a thin, glassy coating.
Here, the glaze is smooth and even, suggesting the cat was fired within a protective sagger.
The underside of the figure is open, revealing the pressed-clay interior.
Two or three minute stilt contacts are visible on the bottom ledge, confirming that the figure rested on kiln props during firing rather than being supported from beneath a closed base.
The cobalt wash was brushed under the glaze before firing.
It fuses permanently into the surface, creating soft haloes of blue wholly consistent with decoration on salt-glazed figures from the Whieldon circle circa 1750-1760.
Later 19th-century reproductions employ overpainted enamels that sit atop the glaze.
The open underside, authentic stratified body, integrated socket, and original cobalt staining collectively identify this as a genuine product of Staffordshire’s mid-18th-century agateware tradition, most plausibly from the orbit of Thomas Whieldon at Fenton Vivian or a closely related potter.
The measured height, modelling, and marbling correspond closely to examples in the Burnap Collection (nos.. 362–363, Nelson-Atkins Museum) and Sotheby’s (2015) — “A Staffordshire agateware cat-form candlestick, circa 1755.
Provenance / Condition:
Current Condition: Excellent, with one ear repaired at the tip and restoration at the top of the candleholder; the glaze remains bright and continuous across the body and socket.
References:
Burnap Collection, English Pottery 1675–1825, nos. 362–363.
Sotheby’s (2015) — “A Staffordshire agateware cat-form candlestick, circa 1755.
Christie’s, London 2010, lot 82.
1stDibs “Staffordshire Agateware Pottery Saltglaze Figure of a Cat,” item ref LU95812370442 Price: $4,482.16
Chipstone Foundation, Marbled Agateware: Techniques and Identification, 2005.
Henry Sandon, Staffordshire Pottery, 1970, pp. 52–54.
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