Details
Each modelled by P. Reinicke, the first as a poultry seller, looking to his left, wearing a buff coloured hat, a yellow jacket and brown breeches, carrying a basket of eggs over his right arm and two dead birds in his left hand, the figure of a poultry chef modelled standing wearing a white jacket and apron and purple breeches, plucking a chicken in his right hand, above a basket of feathers, each on gilt scroll-moulded base
The poultry seller 534 in. (14.2 cm.) high, the poultry chef 538 in. (13.3 cm.) high
Literature
Melitta Kunze-Köllensperger, Collection Franz E. Burda, Meissen, Augsburg, 1997, p. 131, fig 55 (for the poultry seller) and p. 73, fig. 54 (for the chef).
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Lot Essay

The Meissen manufactory created two set of Cris de Paris figures, the first, a group of seven male figures, was probably modelled by P. Reinicke, between 1744 and 1747. The present models are from the second series, which consisted of 34 standing figures, very slightly smaller in scale than the first series. Created after 1753, the second series was also probably modelled by P. Reinicke. It became the most extensive series of figures made at the Meissen manufactory.

The designs for this later series of Cris de Paris figures were taken from a series of watercolour drawings which were commissioned by the French art dealer Jean-Claude Huet (d. 1755), a merchant and dealer of Meissen porcelain in Paris. Three sets of watercolour drawings of these designs (which are now partly complete) exist in the Meissen archives and one set is inscribed with the date 1753, suggesting that this may have been the date that the drawings arrived at the manufactory. It is assumed that the porcelain models were produced very shortly after this. The first set of drawings are inscribed with a ‘CH number’ and some are inscribed with factory numbers and instructions for the factory’s painters and modellers. Traditionally, the watercolour drawings have been attributed to the French painter Christophe Huet (1700-1759), due to the presence of the CH monogram, however, Vanessa Sigalas & Meredith Chilton suggest that the watercolour drawings ‘do not resemble the oeuvre of Christophe Hüet… a well-known animal painter’ and that the CH in all likelihood refers to Jean-Claude Huet, the dealer, who probably commissioned a local artist to produce them. See All Walks of Life, A Journey with The Alan Shimmerman Collection, Stuttgart, 2022, pp. 264-271 and cat. nos. 76 (for the poultry seller) and cat. no. 96 (for the poultry chef).






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