Elephant Candelabrum Vase (Vase à Tête d'Eléphant)

Description

This model is one of the more exotic forms created by Jean-Claude Duplessis. The elephants’ trunks originally supported double candle sockets that are now missing. The idea of combining elephant heads with a vase may have derived from a Ming dynasty Chinese vase or a Meissen candelabrum. The Sèvres painter Pierre-Louis-Philippe Armand accentuated the sensuous qualities of the elephants by framing their brown eyes with pink lids and long eyelashes.

Elephant Candelabrum Vase (Vase à Tête d'Eléphant)

Jean-Claude Duplessis

c. 1757–58

Accession Number

108575

Medium

Soft-paste porcelain, polychrome enamels, and gilding

Dimensions

38.5 × 25 × 14.7 cm (15 1/8 × 9 13/16 × 5 3/4 in.)

Classification

vase

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Joseph Maier and Arthur Lewis Liebman Memorial: Gift of Kenneth J. Maier, M.D.