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The Decorative Arts: Meissen Porcelain
In 1997, the New Orleans Museum of Art received one of the most significant gifts to the Decorative Arts collection in the Museum's
history: the H. Lloyd Hawkins, Jr. Collection of nearly 350 works by the renowned Meissen Porcelain Manufactory of Saxony, Germany. Mrs.
Lois C. Hawkins has recently honored NOMA once again with the donation of funds to construct a special gallery dedicated to the exhibition
of her late husband's collection. The gallery, a lovely 1,100 square-foot area on NOMA's second floor, has been specifically designed as
an intimate viewing space for these exquisitely crafted works in porcelain, so that a significant portion of the collection can be shown
at a given time. The Museum will rotate the Meissen pieces on exhibition to demonstrate the breadth and depth of the Hawkins Collection.
Contemporary audiences may not comprehend the mania for porcelain set off by the development of the formula for true or
hard-paste porcelain at Meissen in late 1709. Among royalty and aristocrats, the possession of porcelain immediately became one
of the major status symbols of the 18th Century, second only to owning an appropriate palace as a mark of rank and privilege.
Mr. Hawkins' fascination for Meissen figures was certainly akin to that of the 18th Century collectors. He was presented the
important Meissen allegorical set of The Four Elements as a gift in 1954. Over the next several decades, Mr. Hawkins acquired
nearly 450 figures and groups. He was entranced by the virtuosity of the work and intrigued that the Meissen factory created an
entirely new European art form when it introduced its now-celebrated figures.
The Hawkins Gallery of Meissen Porcelain showcases these magnificent artworks for NOMA's many visitors.
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