Garniture of Three Vases – Unknown
Unknown1700 – 1750
该作品的收藏者:
Japanese craftsmen made vases such as this set for the European market, and Europeans eagerly collected them from the 1600s through the 1800s. Many European princes and nobles amassed large collections of Chinese and Japanese ceramics, which they installed in rooms known as "China cabinets." There, porcelains decorated entire walls, with vases, plates, and cups set on brackets or overmantels, in cabinets, and along shelves or even the floor.
For centuries, Europeans considered Chinese and Japanese porcelain an exotic and rare material that only the rich could afford. Europeans finally discovered the formula and ingredients for "true" or hard-paste porcelain in the first decade of the 1700s.
作品介绍
- 标题: Garniture of Three Vases
- 创作者: Unknown
- 日期: 1700 – 1750
- 外部链接: Find out more about this object on the Museum website.
- 材质: Hard-paste porcelain with enamel and gilded decoration
- Source Credit Line: The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
- Object Type: Vase
- Object Status: Permanent Collection
- Number: 87.DE.26
- Display Location: Currently on view at: Getty Center, Museum South Pavilion, Gallery S105; Not currently on view
- Department: Sculpture & Decorative Arts
- Culture: Japanese
- 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-vases-unknown/