In both cases, it is thanks to the ancestral and empirical knowledge of the properties of the soil and the grape varieties, combined with the delicate mastery of technical and physico-chemical constraints with complex interactions, that man achieves, in the long term, the domination of nature. This faculty enables him to carry out the almost alchemical transmutation of natural elements into consumer products intended to satisfy habits and tastes, revealing the characteristics of society and fashion at a given time. For François Rabelais, as for Ernest Hemingway, "wine is the most civilised thing in the world".
This publication highlights the way in which faience, through its forms and decorations, reflects the sociological evolution of wine consumption in France from the 17th century until the advent of industrial society, and more precisely from 1640, the date of the official appearance of the word "faience", to 1863, the date of the first appearance of phylloxera.
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Arts décoratifs 17e, 18e et 19e
AMBRE : TRÉSORS DE LA MER BALTIQUE DU XVIe AU XVIIIe SIÈCLE...
LES VASES DE SÈVRES, XVIIIE-XXIE SIÈCLES
ÉLOGE DE LA VIRT...
LES SINGERIES DE CHANTILLY...
DE BRONZE ET D'OR
BRONZES DORÉS DU MUSÉE NISSIM DE ...