
Getty Museum
Pair of Pot-pourri Bowls
Unknown
- Date
- porcelain about 1660–1680; mounts about 1750
- Medium
- Hard-paste porcelain, celadon ground color, and polychrome enamel decoration; gilt-bronze mounts
- Culture
- Japanese (porcelain); French (mount)
- Department
- Decorative Arts
- Institution
- Getty Museum
The *marchands-merciers* of eighteenth-century Paris devised ingenious ways to adapt rare and exotic materials to tempt their clients. These luxury good dealers purchased lacquer, porcelain, and hardstone vessels or panels and sent them to craftsmen with explicit orders to create interesting and decorative designs by combining the objects with new elements. Combining porcelain with gilt bronze was one of the dealer's main activities. Here shell-shaped Japanese porcelains from Arita or early Hirado kilns have been transformed into potpourri vases by adding gilt bronze feet, lids, and handles in Paris. Delicate golden shells form the feet of each vase, and the handles are made of twisted bands of seaweed. Craftsmen perforated each imitation fan coral lid, allowing the scent of the potpourri to emerge.
The authoritative record is held by Getty Museum. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Getty Museum and other institutions.

Pair of Lidded Vases
Getty Museum

Pair of Lidded Bowls (vases cassolettes à monter)
Getty Museum

Pair of Lidded Jars
Getty Museum

Pair of Lidded Bowls
Getty Museum

Lidded Bowl
Getty Museum

Vase
Getty Museum

Pair of Potpourri Vases (potspourris Pompadour, troisième grandeur)
Getty Museum

Potpourri Vase
Cleveland Museum of Art

Potpourri Vase
Cleveland Museum of Art

Mounted Lidded Bowl
Getty Museum

Lidded Bowl
Getty Museum
Pair of Vases
Art Institute of Chicago