Friday, September 30, 2011

Man's Best Friend




It was while reading a book recently (or was it a blog?) that I first came across the image of the Meissen Bolognese Dog, above. (For the life of me, I can't remember in which book I first saw the dog.) Anyway, I later discovered that the dog, or a similar one, is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Modeled by Johann Gottlieb Kirchner around 1733, the porcelain figure is really very striking and fascinating too. I admit that it's a little odd that such a gnarly and rather ferocious looking dog could capture my attention.

Certainly, he (or possibly she?) is not as handsome as a proper English Staffordshire spaniel nor as refined as a Meissen pug. But isn't that the beauty of the dog? His pedigree is a little questionable yes, but that lack of provenance doesn't make him any less attractive in my eyes. In fact, his mutt-ish appearance is what I find so intriguing. And you know what they say about mutts- they make the best dogs. (Sorry, Alfie.)

Yes, there are a lot of pretty porcelain puppies out there, but I think it's time to give a less-fortunate looking one a good home.





Figure of a dog, painted Porcelain, Chinese, c. 18th c., collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum




Figure of a dog, glazed porcelain, Chinese, c. 1662-1722, collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum




Porcelain dog, Chinese, c. 1750-70, collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.




Dog, Chinese, c. 18th c., collection of Les Arts Decoratifs




A pair of Chinese Export dogs, c. 1780-90, available through George Subkoff Antiques.




Chinese Export dogs, one with a puppy on its back, c. 1850, available through Kentshire Galleries.

9 comments:

  1. This really made me laugh. I think children would be terrified of them and they could be relied upon to guard other precious pieces. I love the coloration of the first dog but it might just be too cruel to own such a thing with little children at home.

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  2. Mutts DO make the best dogs, often the smartest and the healthiest. I hope your readers will remember that when considering a pet (cats too) and adopt from your local shelter. Loved the porcelain.

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  3. These are perfect--I like all my art(even the cute, decorative kind) to have some edge to it. The Meissen piece reminds me in its attitude of some Chinese tomb-guarding figures.

    My favorite is the pair of dogs with the green collars; they seem to have such a mocking, sarcastic expression.
    --Road to Parnassus

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  4. Soo interesting! Do Foo Dogs count (from the Chinese, also)? Loved the images. xxpeggybraswelldesign.com

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  5. The pair with the green collars do indeed look like they're mocking somebody. They're a little bit haughty, which I rather like.

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  6. I really try not to regret the things that I don't buy when we travel. Everything happens for a reason and wow does it get painful to pay those surplus baggage fees. But the pair of soulful Foo dogs at the market in Chengdu for what? $70? I'm an idiot. They were real and that will never happen again!

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  7. Provence- I too have experienced that kind of regret- once at not buying a Coromandel screen that cost next to nothing, and another at not accepting a gift of a new MaxMara coat from my mother!

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  8. I'm a dog lover, too. Favorites: anything Chinese, French or Meissen. Or 19th c. dog portraits. But Alfie (and Jones by extension) is definitely more beautiful than porcelains. Fun post. Mary

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  9. Makes me wonder the inspiration of some of these figures, because I have not seen dogs that look like any of those statues!

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