Birds, Bugs and Butterflies: Lady Betty Cobbe’s ’Peacock’ China
Title Details

143 Pages

28 x 21 cm

194 colour illus.

Imprint: Boydell Press

Birds, Bugs and Butterflies: Lady Betty Cobbe's 'Peacock' China

A Biography of an Irish Service of Worcester Porcelain

by Alec Cobbe

  • Description
  • Contents
  • Reviews
  • Related Content
A major contribution to our knowledge of the Worcester porcelain factory in its early years, based on a single large and elaborate dinner service commissioned by an Irish family.

2020 Winner of the American Ceramic Circle Book Award

The early years of the famous Worcester porcelain factory established by Dr Wall have always been a little mysterious, owing to the destruction of the records of thebusiness for this period. Alec Cobbe's discovery of family papers listing the purchases over a period of years of a particularly beautiful and ornate table set have enabled him to give a vivid glimpse of how the factory interacted with its customers. He is able to describe the commissioning of perhaps the largest service of first period Worcester porcelain on record by Thomas and Lady Betty Cobbe for Newbridge House Co. Dublin. It was bought in stages from 1763 as the family travelled from Dublin to Bath each year, stopping at Worcester en route, as other Irish gentry did. The Cobbe service, uniquely in the context of British porcelain, was accompanied by a full set of Irish silver and steel cutlery fitted with Worcester porcelain handles matching the service. The various pieces of porcelain and their historical context are described as well as their painted decoration, and the sources for it. The later history of the service is outlined and its gradual dispersal in the nineteenth century, culminating in a final sale of the remaining pieces lot by lot in a Christie's sale in 1920. This book celebrates Cobbe's reassembly of more than 160 pieces of the original service over a period of more than thirty years and their return to Newbridge following their exhibition in the State Apartments at Dublin Castle. Overall, the book gives an important insight into Irish social life and patronage in the mid-eighteenth century.

Alec Cobbe was born in Ireland and still resides in Newbridge House, Co. Dublin, where his ancestors have lived since it was built in the middle of the eighteenth century. He practises as an artist and designer. As a passionate collector, he added to his family's historic collections and assembled the world's largest group of composer-owned keyboard instruments.
Foreword
Preface and Acknowledgements
Beginnings
'Snuff for Dr Walls': the Cobbes in Worcester and London
Plans for Collecting and Entertaining
The Peacock Service and its Cutlery
The Decoration of the Original Peacock Service
The Service through later Centuries, Sale and Reassembly
Appendix I: Transcripts from Worcester and Cobbe archives, accounts and inventories
Appendix II: Hypothetical tally of the original Peacock Service
Appendix III: Transcript of Christie's 1920 sale catalogue
Appendix IV: Known destinations of Cobbe pieces
Appendix V: A note on the nomenclature of Worcester porcelain pieces
Appendix VI: Inventory of Worcester blue-scale porcelain from the original service, and re-assembled pieces in Lady Betty's pattern of birds, insects and butterflies
"The achievement of this valuable publication and its accompanying exhibition are clear to see, as is the relevance of its research in the fields of eighteenth-century material culture, ceramic studies and the history of collecting." Anna Moran, Eighteen Century Studies

Hardcover

9781783274727

October 2019

Buy

£45.00 / $65.00

Shipping Options

Buy Fewer than 20 copies available

Buy

Purchasing options are not available in this country.

Title Details

143 Pages

2.8 x 2.1 cm

194 colour illus.

Imprint: Boydell Press