Honoré Savy
Honoré Savy was a French potter who was the founder of a factory that manufactured faience wares in Marseille, France, between 1749 and 1790. He is associated with the Veuve Perrin and Leroy factories.
Career
Around 1749 a new period of faience manufacture began in which the first factory was established by Honore Savy in which polychrome decoration succeeded the earlier style using blue with some violet.A letter of 27 September 1765 to M. Bertin described Savy as a master of fayance fabrication for fifteen years.
In 1765 Honoré Savy applied for permission to start making porcelain. The minister, Bertin, was discouraging. That year he became a member of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture of Marseilles.
In July 1777 Savy was visited by Monsieur, le Comte de Provence, the brother of King Louis XVI. Monsieur inspected a large display of all types of faience in the workshop's gallery, but there is no mention of porcelain. Monsieur placed the factory under his protection, and gave permission for it to use his arms, and to display a statue of the prince in the gallery.
A Marseille business directory for 1779–80 listed Savy as making both enamelled faience and porcelain.