Object Image

Figure of Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony

Although diminutive, the porcelain figure of Augustus the Strong (Augustus II, Elector of Saxony and king of Poland) represents both a powerful leader and the results of his determination to discover the formula to produce porcelain, a secret well-guarded by its Asian manufacturers. Augustus pursued his quest by hiring Johann Friedrich Böttger. In 1709, Böttger discovered the necessary ingredients to produce hard-paste porcelain, most importantly white kaolin clay. Under Augustus' patronage, Meissen, the first European porcelain manufactory, was established in 1710. This example of Augustus in armor, was executed in the first decade of European porcelain manufacture. Johann Joachim Kändler, appointed court sculptor by Augustus, became the master modeler at Meissen in 1733. As a sculptor, he preferred to ornament the porcelain with richly molded details, as seen in the intricately molded plate from the Swan Service made for Meissen's director, Count Heinrich von Brühl.

Purchase: Nelson Gallery Foundation

1715-1720
Hard-paste porcelain with gilding
4.4 x 11.1in
F84-33
Image and text: The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 2023

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