Details
Modeled as a female figure draped in beads resting on a rocky outcropping and tree-stump, a quiver of arrows on her back, her foot resting on an elephant head and with a lion to her side
1418 in. (36 cm.) high
Provenance
Almost certainly in the collection of King George IV of England, 1821.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, New York, 21 October 2005, lot 158.
Literature
Emile Bourgeois, Le Biscuit de Sèvres, Paris, 1909, p. 46, no. 8.
Geoffrey de Bellaigue, French Porcelain in the Collection of Her Majesty the Queen, London, 2009, vol. 3, pp. 1111-1112.
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Lot Essay

The present figure emblematic of Africa is one from a set of four figures representing the four corners of the World acquired by King George IV of England soon after he ascended the throne in 1821. The figure of Europe remains in the Royal Collection, while the figures of Asia and America have been lost.

The Sèvres ledger lists the set as the first item under a heading A S M L Roi d'Angleterre [To his Majesty the King of England] at a cost of 144 francs per figure for a total of 576 francs. Looking through the roster of his other purchases, including a biscuit group of Ganymede and Hebe, the Continents appear to be the most expensive by far. As the next entry in the ledger is the listing of sales at the annual selling exposition held at the Louvre between 26 December 1821 and 7 January 1822, the king's purchases must have been made earlier in 1821.

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