the New Chambers was turned into one of many storage sites for works of art. Nearly all 2,400 porcelain objects from Charlottenburg Palace and many paintings from Berlin and Potsdam were stored there
attended receptions. However, William II would not accept the gifts from this guest that included porcelain objects, arts and crafts, and luxurious silks. They were sent to the collections of the Royal Museums
preserved in almost every room. The works on display today, which include lacquered furniture, porcelain, faience, sculpture and paintings, illustrate how arts flourished and people lived at court around
Neue Pinakothek; South Carolina, Middleton Palace; privately owned). It was also reproduced in porcelain and as a copper engraving (16). A poem has also been dedicated to it. The Girl Tying her Sandal
of Oranienburg now houses a collection of unique works, including the splendid etageres in the Porcelain Chamber. There is an outstanding ivory seating arrangement, made around 1640 in Brazil, and a series
Man in the Small Gallery at Sanssouci Palace Potsdam, Sanssouci Palace Ceiling Painting in the Porcelain Chamber at Caputh House Caputh House Medallion for the start of Brandenburg’s seafaring venture
1800 decorative cast iron began to be used in areas previously reserved for precious metals and porcelain, whether in the production of medals and jewelry or of household utensils. Support from Frederick
French Sculpture Collection Catalogue of Antiquities, vol. II Collection Catalogue of East Asian Porcelain Collection Catalogue of Furniture at the New Palace Collection Catalogue of Incrustations, Stonecutting
and Potsdam, c. 1750 (Sanssouci Palace, the Chinese House, Charlottenburg Palace) 18th century porcelain chandeliers from the Meissen manufactory and the Königliche Porzellan-Manufaktur (KPM) Berlin (the
es et des collections d'art de haut niveau avec des chefs-d'œuvre exceptionnels. Le Cabinet de porcelaine, la Chapelle du château et la chambre à coucher de Frédéric Ier font partie des points culminants