Cozzi porcelain

A Cozzi porcelain cup and saucer, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Cozzi porcelain is porcelain made by the Cozzi factory in Venice, which operated between 1764 and 1812. Production included sculptural figurines, mostly left in plain glazed white, and tableware, mostly painted with floral designs or with figures in landscapes and buildings, in "bright but rough" colours. They were rather derivative, drawing from Meissen porcelain in particular in the early years.[1]

The Cozzi factory was the last but most successful of the three factories which made Venetian porcelain actually in the city of Venice in the 18th century. Initially the Cozzi factory made soft-paste porcelain, but by the 1770s they were making hard-paste porcelain, with kaolin from near Vicenza, giving a "thin hard grey paste with a shiny wet-looking surface".[2] Their body is sometimes classified as "hybrid hard-paste porcelain" as although it contains kaolin it was apparently fired at lower temperatures than other hard-pastes.[3]

Serving plate, c. 1769–1790
  1. ^ Savage and Newman, 87
  2. ^ Le Corbeiller, 8–10; Battie, 103 (quoted)
  3. ^ Hess, 230, 237 note 7; however, most museums do not bother with this distinction

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