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Herend Horse

Herend Finest Quality Hand Painted Porcelain Foal Baby Horse Reclining Figurine
By Herend
Located in Tustin, CA
Beautifully handmade estate porcelain Herend "Foal" or baby horse figurine has been expertly hand
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Hungarian Other Animal Sculptures

Materials

Porcelain

People Also Browsed

Porcelain basket from Herend Hungary
By Herend
Located in Torino, IT
Porcelain potpourri basket by Herend Hungary. Fine and rare basket made of the finest porcelain and hand-painted with enamel and 24-karat gold details. Made by the leading Hungaria...
Category

Vintage 1960s Hungarian Decorative Bowls

Materials

Porcelain

Recent Sales

Herend Nude Female Figure on a Rearing Horse
By Herend
Located in Houston, TX
Porcelain Herend female nude figure   Condition is perfect, circa 1960s. Measure: 16” H x 18
Category

Mid-20th Century Hungarian Other Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Porcelain

Herend Finest Quality Hand Painted Porcelain Carousel Horse Figurine
By Herend
Located in Tustin, CA
Beautiful handmade estate porcelain Herend "Carousel Horse" Item No. MCD15875-0-00 has been
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Hungarian Other Animal Sculptures

Materials

Porcelain

Herend Nude Female Figure on a Rearing Horse
By Herend
Located in Houston, TX
Porcelain Herend female nude figure Condition is perfect, circa 1960s. Measure: 16” H x 18” W
Category

Mid-20th Century Other Art Style Nude Sculptures

Materials

Porcelain

Godollo Tea Set in Herend Porcelain for Famous Queen Elizabeth
By Herend
Located in Paris, FR
Godollo tea set in Herend Porcelaine for 6 persons. Japanese Kakiemon inspired hand-painted
Category

Mid-20th Century Hungarian Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Edme Samson Porcelaine De Paris French Armorial Coat of Arms Lidded Jar 6"
By Edmé Samson
Located in Dayton, OH
in France with an armorial coat of arms with a lion and horse over the motto “Sola Virtus In Vista
Category

Late 20th Century French Provincial Jars

Materials

Porcelain

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Herend for sale on 1stDibs

Herend Porcelain occupies a singular place in the world of luxury European ceramics. The firm's vast range of figurines and distinctive patterns are visually striking and notably different from those of other major porcelain producers like Meissen or Sèvres. Whereas the latter tend to feature discrete decorative elements that appear to float on a white background, Herend favors large, bold designs for its porcelain, with its serving pieces, dishes and other works incorporating historical scenes, animals or vegetation.

Vince Stingl established what would become the Herend Porcelain Manufactory in 1826 in the town of Herend, Hungary, to produce earthenware. When he went bankrupt in the late 1830s, Mór Fischer, who took over, switched the focus from earthenware to porcelain to take advantage of the growing European market for fine china. 

By 1849, Herend counted among its clients members of the Habsburg dynasty and the Hungarian aristocracy. Thanks to its participation in several important international exhibitions and fairs — including the 1851 Crystal Palace Exhibition in London, the 1853 Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations in New York and the 1855 Exposition Universelle in Paris — its wares became a popular choice for courtly dining in the middle of the 19th century, and its patrons included Francis Joseph I of Austria and Queen Victoria of England, for whom its Viktória pattern was named.

The company foundered in the latter half of the 19th century under the leadership of Fischer’s two sons. But it was given new life, artistically and financially, when Fischer’s grandson, Jenő Farkasházy, himself a trained ceramist, took the helm around 1900. Farkasházy designed new patterns and revived classic ones. After World War II, Herend was nationalized by the Communist government but kept alive its tradition of skilled craftsmanship by continuing to produce its classic patterns. In 1993, after the fall of the Iron Curtain, the factory was privatized once again and today is owned by its management and workers.

Authentic Herend animal figurines — their groupings of white rabbits, cats or pheasants — are often covered head to toe with the factory’s famed “fish-scale” pattern, also known as Vieux Herend, which produces the effect of a dense coat of feathers or fur. The fish-scale pattern also appears on this chocolate cup and saucer decorated in the Cornucopia pattern.

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