Garniture of Three Lidded Vases and Two Open Vases – Unknown
Unknownabout 1662 – 1722
该作品的收藏者:
Chinese factories sent their porcelain pieces made for export down the Yangtze River, first to Nanjing and then to Canton, where Chinese merchants sold them to European traders. Parisian dealers bought most of their imported porcelain from the Dutch East Indies Company in Amsterdam, the main European importer of Far Eastern goods for many years. The volume of this trade in porcelain was enormous: in 1752 a ship headed for Europe sank with 223,303 pieces of porcelain on board.
In the 1600s and 1700s, Europeans considered porcelain an exotic and rare material that only the upper classes could afford. Many princes and nobles amassed large collections of Chinese and Japanese ceramics, installing them in rooms known as "China cabinets." There, porcelains in arrangements known as garnitures decorated entire walls, with vases, plates, and cups set on brackets or overmantels, in and on top of cabinets, and along shelves or even the floor. After eagerly purchasing Chinese and Japanese wares for hundreds of years, Germans finally discovered the formula for "true" or hard-paste porcelain in the first decade of the 1700s.
作品介绍
- 标题: Garniture of Three Lidded Vases and Two Open Vases
- 创作者: Unknown
- 日期: about 1662 – 1722
- 外部链接: Find out more about this object on the Museum website.
- 材质: Hard-paste porcelain, under-glaze blue decoration
- Source Credit Line: The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
- Object Type: Vase
- Object Status: Permanent Collection
- Number: 72.DE.72
- Display Location: Currently on view at: Getty Center, Museum South Pavilion, Gallery S104; Not currently on view; Not currently on view
- Department: Sculpture & Decorative Arts
- Culture: Chinese (Kangxi reign)
- Classification: Decorative Arts
该作品收藏于:
原创文章,作者:lostcat,如若转载,请注明出处:http://culture.ceramicsj.com/2018/08/14/garniture-of-three-lidded-vases-and-two-open-vases-unknown/