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Meissen Amphoras

Meissen Porcelain Urn Snake Handles Amphora, Germany
Meissen Porcelain Urn Snake Handles Amphora, Germany

Meissen Porcelain Urn Snake Handles Amphora, Germany

By Meissen Porcelain

Located in New York, NY

An antique Meissen porcelain urn with snake handles amphora, circa early-20th century, Germany

Category

Early 20th Century German Urns

Materials

Porcelain

Vintage German Carl Thieme Dresden Porcelain Amphora Vasiform Urn Table Lamp
Vintage German Carl Thieme Dresden Porcelain Amphora Vasiform Urn Table Lamp

Vintage German Carl Thieme Dresden Porcelain Amphora Vasiform Urn Table Lamp

By Carl Thieme, Meissen Porcelain, Dresden Porcelain

Located in Forney, TX

A elegant antique German Dresden porcelain amphora-shaped vasiform urn, Carl Thieme, Potschappel

Category

20th Century German Victorian Table Lamps

Materials

Brass

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Meissen Amphora with Lid, circa 1900
Meissen Amphora with Lid, circa 1900

Meissen Amphora with Lid, circa 1900

By Meissen Porcelain

Located in Vienna, AT

amphora with lid manufactured in Meissen about 1900. White porcelain slightly gilded with hand

Category

Antique Early 1900s German Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Meissen Tall Amphora Multicolored Vase with Two Handles, made c. 1950
Meissen Tall Amphora Multicolored Vase with Two Handles, made c. 1950

Meissen Tall Amphora Multicolored Vase with Two Handles, made c. 1950

By Meissen Porcelain

Located in Vienna, AT

Meissen Tall Amphora Multicolored Vase With Two Handles / Abundantly Painted With Flowers As Well

Category

Vintage 1950s German Neoclassical Revival Vases

Materials

Porcelain

Imposing Pair of Amphora in German Meissen Porcelain, 18th Century
Imposing Pair of Amphora in German Meissen Porcelain, 18th Century

Imposing Pair of Amphora in German Meissen Porcelain, 18th Century

By Meissen Porcelain

Located in Madrid, ES

Imposing pair of Amphora in German Meissen porcelain, 18th century. Pair of amphoras in German

Category

Antique Mid-18th Century German Baroque Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

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Émile Gallé small Cameo vase, Art Nouveau, ca 1900
Émile Gallé small Cameo vase, Art Nouveau, ca 1900

Émile Gallé small Cameo vase, Art Nouveau, ca 1900

By Émile Gallé

Located in Delft, NL

Émile Gallé small Cameo vase, Art Nouveau, ca 1900 Émile Gallé (Nancy, 1846 –1904) was a French glassmaker and furniture designer Émile Gallé 20 cm high footed Cameo vase made in...

Category

Early 20th Century French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Glass

Pair 19th Century Meissen Porcelain Chinoiserie Style of Nodding Pagoda Figures
Pair 19th Century Meissen Porcelain Chinoiserie Style of Nodding Pagoda Figures

Pair 19th Century Meissen Porcelain Chinoiserie Style of Nodding Pagoda Figures

By Meissen Porcelain

Located in New York, NY

A large rare pair of 19th century Meissen Chinoiserie style Nodding Pagoda Figures with Movable Head, Hand and Tongue, known as a "Nodder'. This Unusual and Highly Detailed Novelty s...

Category

Antique 1850s German Rococo Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Porcelain

19th Century, Monumental Carved Boiserie Panels from Lartington Hall
19th Century, Monumental Carved Boiserie Panels from Lartington Hall

19th Century, Monumental Carved Boiserie Panels from Lartington Hall

Located in London, GB

The Lartington hall carved Boiserie panels by Signor Anton Leone Bulletti. A highly important suite of eight carved and patinated wood panels commissioned by Monsignor Thomas Edw...

Category

Antique 19th Century English Renaissance Revival Panelling

Materials

Wood, Pine

Late 19th Century French Aubusson Tapestry
Late 19th Century French Aubusson Tapestry

Late 19th Century French Aubusson Tapestry

$9,500

H 77 in W 65 in D 0.25 in

Late 19th Century French Aubusson Tapestry

Located in Chicago, IL

A beautiful late 19th century French Aubusson tapestry depicting a hunt scene with a hunter mounted on horse with two hounds chasing a stag through a forest landscape and a castle in...

Category

Antique Late 19th Century French Aubusson Tapestries

Materials

Wool

Antique Meissen 68-Piece Floral Dinner Service
Antique Meissen 68-Piece Floral Dinner Service

Antique Meissen 68-Piece Floral Dinner Service

$47,525 / set

H 2.37 in W 20.67 in D 14.77 in

Antique Meissen 68-Piece Floral Dinner Service

By Meissen Porcelain

Located in London, GB

Antique Meissen 68-piece floral dinner service German, c. 1900 Largest serving dish: Height 6cm, width 52.5cm, depth 37.5cm Square salad bowl: Height 9.5cm, width 22cm, depth 22cm...

Category

Antique Early 1900s German Rococo Dinner Plates

Materials

Porcelain

Tiffany & Company, George Paulding Farnham, A Rare, Lavish Silver Centerpiece
Tiffany & Company, George Paulding Farnham, A Rare, Lavish Silver Centerpiece

Tiffany & Company, George Paulding Farnham, A Rare, Lavish Silver Centerpiece

By Paulding Farnham., Tiffany & Co.

Located in Long Island City, NY, NY

Tiffany & Company and George Paulding Farnham, A rare, lavish and monumental sterling silver centerpiece with original mirrored-glass sterling silver plateau, circa 1900. Museum...

Category

Early 20th Century American American Classical Sterling Silver

Materials

Sterling Silver

Extensive English Porcelain Dessert Service, circa 1825
Extensive English Porcelain Dessert Service, circa 1825

Extensive English Porcelain Dessert Service, circa 1825

Located in New York, NY

Pair of covered fruit coolers, pair of covered sauce tureens, pair of open work baskets, 1 compote, 4 kidney-shaped dishes, pair of square dishes, pair of oval dishes, 16 plates.

Category

Antique 1820s English Dinner Plates

Materials

Porcelain

18th Century George III Carved Mirror in the Manner of Thomas Johnson
18th Century George III Carved Mirror in the Manner of Thomas Johnson

18th Century George III Carved Mirror in the Manner of Thomas Johnson

By Thomas Johnson II

Located in London, GB

A George III Giltwood Pier Mirror In the Manner of Thomas Johnson An exceptionally detailed design; the superb carved decoration housing a shaped rectangular plate and undulating...

Category

Antique Mid-18th Century British George III Pier Mirrors and Console Mir...

Materials

Mirror, Wood, Giltwood

19th Century British Porcelain Dinnerware Service
19th Century British Porcelain Dinnerware Service

19th Century British Porcelain Dinnerware Service

$24,000 / set

H 2 in W 14.8 in D 16.5 in

19th Century British Porcelain Dinnerware Service

Located in Tarry Town, NY

Mid 19th Century British porcelain dinnerware service with hand painted gilt foliate borders with bouquets of wild flowers against a white background design details. Each piece is in...

Category

Antique 1820s English Tableware

Materials

Gold

A 20th century Meissen porcelain set, Germany
A 20th century Meissen porcelain set, Germany

A 20th century Meissen porcelain set, Germany

By Meissen Porcelain

Located in Delft, NL

A 20th century Meissen porcelain set, Germany A porcelain set, manufactured by Meissen in Germany. The set painted with bright colors, red, blue, yellow and green in floral pattern....

Category

20th Century German Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Royal Copenhagen Ichthyological Porcelain Part Dinner 'Fish-Service'
Royal Copenhagen Ichthyological Porcelain Part Dinner 'Fish-Service'

Royal Copenhagen Ichthyological Porcelain Part Dinner 'Fish-Service'

By Royal Copenhagen

Located in London, GB

A Royal Copenhagen Ichthyological porcelain part dinner 'fish-service' Danish, 20th century Plates: height 2cm, diameter 24cm Long dish: height 5cm, width 60cm, depth 24cm Cons...

Category

20th Century Danish Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Dinner Service, 86 Piece, Flow Blue and White, Classic Onion Meissen Pattern
Dinner Service, 86 Piece, Flow Blue and White, Classic Onion Meissen Pattern

Dinner Service, 86 Piece, Flow Blue and White, Classic Onion Meissen Pattern

By Meissen Porcelain

Located in Montreal, Quebec

86 piece dinner service with the marking: "Original ZWIEBELMUSTER, Czechoslovakia", in the Classic Blue Onion, Meissen Pattern, comprising: 24 dinner plates, 9.5" diameter 12...

Category

Antique Late 19th Century Czech Chinoiserie Delft and Faience

Materials

Porcelain

Louis Comfort Tiffany Pastel Favrile Glass Dinnerware
Louis Comfort Tiffany Pastel Favrile Glass Dinnerware

Louis Comfort Tiffany Pastel Favrile Glass Dinnerware

By Tiffany Studios

Located in New Orleans, LA

Exuding the elegance of Art Nouveau design, this dinnerware service for 12 from Tiffany Studios is composed of pastel-hued, opalescent green Favrile glass. The plates, bowls and glas...

Category

20th Century American Art Nouveau Glass

Materials

Glass

Unique and Monumental Late 19th Century German Meissen Porcelain Mirror
Unique and Monumental Late 19th Century German Meissen Porcelain Mirror

Unique and Monumental Late 19th Century German Meissen Porcelain Mirror

By Meissen Porcelain

Located in Long Island City, NY

A Unique and Monumental Late 19th Century German Meissen Porcelain Mirror This palatial mirror is made up of around 12 wonderful individually hand crafted pieces of porcelain. The...

Category

Antique Late 19th Century German Belle Époque Porcelain

Materials

Glass, Porcelain

Monumental Royal Vienna Iridescent Porcelain Portrait Vase and Cover, Wagner
Monumental Royal Vienna Iridescent Porcelain Portrait Vase and Cover, Wagner

Monumental Royal Vienna Iridescent Porcelain Portrait Vase and Cover, Wagner

By Royal Vienna Porcelain

Located in Long Island City, NY, NY

A monumental Royal Vienna Iridescent porcelain portrait vase and cover, Wagner, circa 1880. This Royal Vienna Urn features an exceptional iridescent lustre, of flattened, 2 handled ...

Category

Antique 19th Century Austrian Napoleon III Vases

Materials

Porcelain

Signed Pair of Sevres ‘Third Republic’ Pate Nouvelle Pale Yellow Ground Vases
Signed Pair of Sevres ‘Third Republic’ Pate Nouvelle Pale Yellow Ground Vases

Signed Pair of Sevres ‘Third Republic’ Pate Nouvelle Pale Yellow Ground Vases

By Manufacture Nationale de Sèvres

Located in New York, NY

A magnificent and large pair of signed Sèvres Art Nouveau period ‘Third Republic’ Pate Nouvelle pale yellow ground vases (Vase De Lesbos 1 Grandeur). These premier quality vases are ...

Category

Antique Late 19th Century French Art Nouveau Porcelain

Materials

Gold, Enamel

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Meissen Porcelain for sale on 1stDibs

Meissen Porcelain (Staatliche Porzellan-Manufaktur Meissen) is one of the preeminent porcelain factories in Europe and was the first to produce true porcelain outside of Asia. It was established in 1710 under the auspices of King Augustus II “the Strong” of Saxony-Poland (1670–1733), a keen collector of Asian ceramics, particularly Ming porcelain.

In pursuing his passion, which he termed his “maladie de porcelaine,” Augustus spent vast sums, amassing some 20,000 pieces of Japanese and Chinese ceramics. These, along with examples of early Meissen, comprise the Porzellansammlung, or porcelain collection, of the Zwinger Palace, in Dresden.

The king was determined, however, to free the European market from its dependence on Asian imports and to give European artisans the freedom to create their own porcelain designs. To this end, he charged the scientist Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus and aspiring alchemist Johann Friedrich Böttger with the task of using local materials to produce true, hard-paste porcelain (as opposed to the soft-paste variety European ceramists in the Netherlands, Germany, France, Italy and Spain had been producing since the late Renaissance). In 1709, the pair succeeded in doing just that, employing kaolin, or “china clay.” A year later, the Meissen factory was born.

In its first decades, Meissen mostly looked to Asian models, producing wares based on Japanese Kakiemon ceramics and pieces with Chinese-inflected decorations called chinoiserie. During the 1720s its painters drew inspiration from the works of Watteau, and the scenes of courtly life, fruits and flowers that adorned fashionable textiles and wallpaper. It was in this period that Meissen introduced its famous cobalt-blue crossed swords logo — derived from the arms of the Elector of Saxony as Arch-Marshal of the Holy Roman Empire — to distinguish its products from those of competing factories that were beginning to spring up around Europe.

By the 1730s, Meissen’s modelers and decorators had mastered the style of Asian ceramics, and Augustus encouraged them to develop a new, original aesthetic. The factory’s director, Count Heinrich von Brühl, used Johann Wilhelm Weinmann’s botanical drawings as the basis for a new line of wares with European-style surface decoration. The Blue Onion pattern (Zwiebelmuster), first produced in 1739, melded Asian and European influences, closely following patterns used in Chinese underglaze-blue porcelain, but replacing exotic flora and fruits with Western varieties (likely peaches and pomegranates, not onions) along with peonies and asters.

During the same period, head modeler Joachim Kändler (1706–75) began crafting delicate porcelain figures derived from the Italian commedia dell’arte. Often used as centerpieces on banquet tables and decorated to reflect the latest fashions in courtly dress for men and women, these figurines were popular in their day, and are still considered among Meissen’s most iconic creations. Kändler also created the Swan Service, which, with its complex low-relief surface design and minimal decoration is considered a masterpiece of Baroque ceramics.

The rise of Neoclassicism in the latter half of the 18th century forced Meissen to change artistic direction and begin producing monumental vases, clocks, chandeliers and candelabra. In the 20th century, Meissen added to its 18th-century repertoire decidedly modern designs, including ones in the Art Nouveau style. The 1920s saw the introduction of numerous animal figures, such as the popular sea otter (Fischotter), which graced an East German postage stamp in the 1960s. Starting in 1933, artistic freedom was limited at the factory under the Nazi regime, and after World War II, when the region became part of East Germany, it struggled to reconcile its elite past with the values of the Communist government. In 1969, however, new artistic director Karl Petermann reintroduced the early designs and fostered a new degree of artistic license. Meissen became one of the few companies to prosper in East Germany.

Owned by the State of Saxony since reunification, in 1990, Meissen continues to produce its classic designs together with new ones developed collaboratively with artists from all over the world. In addition, through its artCAMPUS program, the factory has invited distinguished ceramic artists, such as Chris Antemann and Arlene Shechet, to work in its studios in collaboration with its skilled modelers and painters. The resulting works of contemporary sculpture are inspired by Meissen’s rich and complex legacy.

Find a collection of authentic Meissen Porcelain on 1stDibs.

Finding the Right Porcelain for You

Today you’re likely to bring out your antique and vintage porcelain in order to dress up your dining table for a special meal.

Porcelain, a durable and nonporous kind of pottery made from clay and stone, was first made in China and spread across the world owing to the trade routes to the Far East established by Dutch and Portuguese merchants. Given its origin, English speakers called porcelain “fine china,” an expression you still might hear today. "Fine" indeed — for over a thousand years, it has been a highly sought-after material.

Meissen Porcelain, one of the first factories to create real porcelain outside Asia, popularized figurine centerpieces during the 18th century in Germany, while works by Capodimonte, a porcelain factory in Italy, are synonymous with flowers and notoriously hard to come by. Modern porcelain houses such as Maison Fragile of Limoges, France — long a hub of private porcelain manufacturing — keep the city’s long tradition alive while collaborating with venturesome contemporary artists such as illustrator Jean-Michel Tixier.

Porcelain is not totally clumsy-guest-proof, but it is surprisingly durable and easy to clean. Its low permeability and hardness have rendered porcelain wares a staple in kitchens and dining rooms as well as a common material for bathroom sinks and dental veneers. While it is tempting to store your porcelain behind closed glass cabinet doors and reserve it only for display, your porcelain dinner plates and serving platters can safely weather the “dangers” of the dining room and be used during meals.

Add different textures and colors to your table with dinner plates and pitchers of ceramic and silver or a porcelain lidded tureen, a serving dish with side handles that is often used for soups. Although porcelain and ceramic are both made in a kiln, porcelain is made with more refined clay and is stronger than ceramic because it is denser. 

On 1stDibs, browse an expansive collection of antique and vintage porcelain made in a variety of styles, including Regency, Scandinavian modern and other examples produced during the mid-century era, plus Rococo, which found its inspiration in nature and saw potters crafting animal figurines and integrating organic motifs such as floral patterns in their work.