Skip to main content

Herend

Hungarian

Herend Porcelain occupies a singular place in the world of luxury European ceramics. The firm's vast range of figurines and distinctive patterns are visually striking and notably different from those of other major porcelain producers like Meissen or Sèvres. Whereas the latter tend to feature discrete decorative elements that appear to float on a white background, Herend favors large, bold designs for its porcelain, with its serving pieces, dishes and other works incorporating historical scenes, animals or vegetation.

Vince Stingl established what would become the Herend Porcelain Manufactory in 1826 in the town of Herend, Hungary, to produce earthenware. When he went bankrupt in the late 1830s, Mór Fischer, who took over, switched the focus from earthenware to porcelain to take advantage of the growing European market for fine china. 

By 1849, Herend counted among its clients members of the Habsburg dynasty and the Hungarian aristocracy. Thanks to its participation in several important international exhibitions and fairs — including the 1851 Crystal Palace Exhibition in London, the 1853 Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations in New York and the 1855 Exposition Universelle in Paris — its wares became a popular choice for courtly dining in the middle of the 19th century, and its patrons included Francis Joseph I of Austria and Queen Victoria of England, for whom its Viktória pattern was named.

The company foundered in the latter half of the 19th century under the leadership of Fischer’s two sons. But it was given new life, artistically and financially, when Fischer’s grandson, Jenő Farkasházy, himself a trained ceramist, took the helm around 1900. Farkasházy designed new patterns and revived classic ones. After World War II, Herend was nationalized by the Communist government but kept alive its tradition of skilled craftsmanship by continuing to produce its classic patterns. In 1993, after the fall of the Iron Curtain, the factory was privatized once again and today is owned by its management and workers.

Authentic Herend animal figurines — their groupings of white rabbits, cats or pheasants — are often covered head to toe with the factory’s famed “fish-scale” pattern, also known as Vieux Herend, which produces the effect of a dense coat of feathers or fur. The fish-scale pattern also appears on this chocolate cup and saucer decorated in the Cornucopia pattern.

Find antique Herend porcelain on 1stDibs.

to
2
2
2
135
10,045
5,870
5,701
5,499
2
2
2
Designer: Herend
HEREND 1940, Porcelain statuette 'Musicians', Vintage
By Herend
Located in SAINT-CLOUD, FR
HEREND 1940, signed, numbered, Porcelain statuette 'Musicians', Vintage, height 22 cm, weight 918 g, socle 16 x 9,8 cm, good condition. Herend was founded...
Category

1940s Hungarian Herend

HEREND 1941, Porcelain statuette 'Dancers', Vintage
By Herend
Located in SAINT-CLOUD, FR
HEREND 1941, signed, numbered, Porcelain statuette 'Dancers', Vintage, height 25,5 cm, weight 918 g, socle 16 x 9,8 cm, good condition. Herend was founded in 1826 and has had much f...
Category

1940s Hungarian Herend

Related Items
Enamel Silver Pillbox
Located in New York, NY
Lovely enamel maiden portrait on 800 silver round pillbox. Silver has decorative hand etching throughout. 1.5" x 3/8". Italy 1950's. Very Good condition.
Category

1950s Italian Herend

Enamel Silver Pillbox
Enamel Silver Pillbox
H 0.4 in L 1.5 in
8 meters of Border in chiseled velvet - Late 18th century France
Located in Toulon, FR
18th-19th century France Large border of furniture in Louis XVI style chiseled velvet . Caramel taffeta background, plum-colored curly velvet drawing of a wide ribbon of tied and beaded medallions...
Category

Late 18th Century French Herend

Hermès Wooden Barrel Dog Bed Medium
By Hermès
Located in Palm Beach, FL
This authentic Hermès Wooden Barrel Dog Bed is in pristine condition. Double sided soft padded cushion, sturdy oak wood construction. Made in France. ...
Category

2010s Herend

Chanel Blu and Gold Hardware Bracialet
By Chanel
Located in Torre Del Greco, IT
Chanel bracelet in golden hardware with blue crystals.The bracelet is 23.5 cm long. It has a spring ring closure.The conditions of the bracelet are great with slight signs of wear.
Category

1990s French Herend

Barbie Collector/ "All that Jazz" / Gold Label
Located in Saint-Ouen-Sur-Seine, FR
Barbie Collector/ "All that Jazz" / Gold Label. Certificate of authenticity and Collector card. Doll and 1968 Fashion Reproduction.
Category

Early 2000s American Herend

Couture MartinMargiela 1998 WorkOnPaper & Artisanal Line0 WhiteLingerie BoxedSet
By Maison Martin Margiela, Martin Margiella
Located in Chicago, IL
As conceptual art while he transitioned to Hermes Creative Director in 1998, Belgian Martin Margiela--whose creations today debut in the setting of a contemporary-art gallery priced at upwards of EU$150,000--created this stenciled or block print. Conceived by arguably the most culturally influential contemporary fashion designer since Gabriel "Coco" Chanel, it is part of a limited-edition-of-two white-boxed set that includes the couture Maison Martin Margiela "Artisanal Line 0" body-harness lingerie in its maker's signature color white for Spring 1998. The same lingerie--one white and the other black--starred in a film made by Margiela among the five that he screened to present his Spring/Summer 1998 "Flat Collection" in Paris at the Conciergerie. In that film titled "4", which begins with a view of the iconic topless tabi "boots", the hands of Margiela's white-labcoat-clad assistants enter the frame to manipulate different garments on a model who initially wears the exterior lingerie (see our photos) as if jewelry. A simple dark collared coat, a white collared button-down shirt, and a dark button-down cardigan--all with the "displaced neckline" or "displaced shoulder" of the flat-hanging clothes--are transformed into new collarless plunging v-neck garments, which appear to be ruched when folded under the harness of the lingerie. Both black versions of the lingerie are in museum collections. In Martin Margiela's home-country, the ModeMuseum (MoMu) archived its collected piece as OBJ7660. In the 2018 Parisian retrospective exhibition at Musee de la Mode/Palais Galleria when its artistic director was Martin Margiela (working with Curator Alexandre Samson), the second black lingerie was featured on a mannequin and collected the same year by the Vogue Paris Foundation. Other conceptual designs from this same 1998 collection of jewelry were acquired by TheMet museum in Manhattan. Without the restriction of the use and function of clothing, the small uncreased print--on a card that can be removed from the interior-box bottom that it loosely spans--shows the buyer how to endlessly fashion unique tops using the structural-elastic lingerie as an undergarment for their own pre-worn button-down shirts. This is a more obvious example of the once avant-garde concept of anti-fashion upcycling that Martin Margiela introduced to challenge social and fashion-industry norms by the 1990s, which echos the revolutionary anti-art of Marcel Duchamp. Essentially, valuable art/fashion can be made from everyday vintage objects. While Duchamp did so in 1917 with a men's porcelain urinal titled "Fountain" attached to a gallery exhibition wall, they both made the point that it is the way that such items are reassembled that can make the result a progressive statement. What makes the print so special and worthy of framing for display is that, without words, the three numbered images on a single white card encapsulate the before-its-time fashion manifesto of Martin Margiela to recycle fashion in remarkable new wearable ways, such as harnessed by his unique lingerie. According to The New York Times in its 2021 feature-story that reflected on his radical fashion design and delved into his crossover art, Margiela "changed how we dressed in the 1990s", while his art embodies "the visionary man he has always been." At a turning-point shortly after Margiela designed this couture set in 1997, his personal manifesto became more difficult to accomplish in his fashion career as the new leader of France's historic luxury fashion-house Hermes, for which his first womenswear collection was presented for Autumn/Winter 1998. Frustrated by the limitations of the industrialized luxury trade and conglomerate conflicts with his closely guarded privacy, the famously "invisible" designer pre-maturely retired from the fashion industry in 2009 to independently build on his clever artistry in other mediums. Margiela continues to demonstrate what he often told his fashion teams: "The less you have, the more creative you are as a designer." This minimal finely-crafted lingerie without size or gender restriction--composed of adjustable "polya-elasthanne" straps with a clear anti-slip strip on the underside and three silver-plated metal double-rings--can be worn either as a concealed structural undergarment or as a visible jewelry-like body harness in appreciation of its meaning as a foundation for recycling fashion, pure form, and meaningful color. While the initial Maison Martin Margiela ready-to-wear brand tag until the late 1990s was a distinct corner-sewn unbranded white label accompanied by tags for origin and materials/care, the couture version for this lingerie is a single tiny white unbranded tag stitched in a line near the end of the waist strap, noting in English, "Made In France," with succinct material/care identification. The set's original white unbranded box and its white black-typed couture-identification sticker complete the "invisible-brand" aesthetic. We interpret the black-type codes on the aged box-sticker (“E98 ST HAUT; Struct Elas Blanc; 02; TU"): Spring 1998 Haute Couture; white structural-elastic garment; Artisanal Line 0 edition of two; one size only. The print, lingerie and box are in very good condition as shown in the photos with only one mark on the rear edge of the exterior box-lid. Although initially tried on by the sole owner to realize a restructured shirt, the lingerie body-harness was never worn. It was collected in Belgium at the Brussels boutique where Martin Margiela initially sold his brand with his founding business-partner Jenny Meirens since 1988. Prior, Margiela worked for several years as a fashion-design assistant to Parisian Jean Paul Gaultier. Both designers have since received independent museum retrospectives internationally--from Paris' Grand Palais and Musee Palais Galliera (The City of Paris Fashion Museum) to NYC's The Brooklyn Museum and Antwerp's MoMu. While others continue to try, Martin Margiela (b.1957) is the only leading fashion designer to have made a full-time transition to the commercial contemporary-art world with such highly valued works. As a rare revealing piece of both fashion and art history, the increasing value of this Maison Martin Margiela 1997...
Category

1990s French Herend

A Monumental 18th C. Thai Buddha Head Temple Fragment on Teak Stand
Located in Evanston, IL
This impressive and monumental bronze patinated Buddha head fragment dates back to the 18th century or earlier. The head is larger than life-size, showcasing a serene and meditative ...
Category

18th Century Thai Herend

Hermès Pipe Holder Pulley Shackle Shaped Vintage in Silver Rare Navy Theme
By Hermès
Located in FR
Stunning and Rare Authentic Hermès Pipe-Holder In shape of a a pulley and shackle (the shackle is fixed, not movable) Vintage item Answers to the silver test Can be used as pipe-...
Category

Late 20th Century Unknown Herend

Lalique Swan Head Up Pure Crystal Sculpture
By Lalique
Located in Miami, FL
Mightychic offers a Lalique pure crystal satin finish coveted Swan Up sculpture. First designed in 1943 by Rene Lalique this ethereal swan is depicted gliding with her wings back an...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary French Herend

Hermes Blanket Far West Sable Cashmere New
By Hermès
Located in Miami, FL
Mightychic offers a guaranteed authentic Hermes Selle Far West blanket featured in Sable. Jacquard woven Cashmere edged with fringe allows you to see the exquisite image details from each side. This extraordinary saddle is spectacular and inspired from the 1890 Trade catalogues Emile Hermes collection. This beautiful Hermes blanket...
Category

2010s French Herend

Hermes Hoof Pick Stainless Steel Gold Swift Calfskin Case
By Hermès
Located in Miami, FL
Mightychic offers an Hermes stainless steel Hoof Pick. Hermes Gold Swift leather case with Clou de Selle snap. Sleek and elegant, the pick is engraved with Hermes Paris Clou de Sel...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary French Herend

Alexsander Danel Austin Productions Inc Orchide Sculpture AP3590 Fashionista 90s
By Alexsander Danel
Located in Port Saint Lucie, FL
This fabulous 30 inch sculpture of a high fashion woman was produced by Austin Productions and designed by Alexsander Danel in 1990. From our research, this piece is called ORCHIDE, likely from their high fashion collection. The piece stands appx 30in tall and the base is 10in wide. In very good condition for its 27+ years of age, we note some scratches, rubs and tiny dings here and there as you would expect from a vintage sculpture that has been handled, yet it still displays beautifully. Our price reflects this "less than pristine" condition. No paperwork or stickers on bottom, but signed at base AUSTIN PROD INC 1990 and A DANEL...
Category

1990s American Herend

Herend fashion for sale on 1stDibs.

Find an extraordinary range of authentic Herend fashion available on 1stDibs. On 1stDibs, find haute couture, vintage and designer Herend fashion from top boutiques around the world. Herend fashion prices can differ depending upon time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $835 and tops out at $835, while the average work can sell for $835.

Recently Viewed

View All