A Meissen puzzle wine-pot

CIRCA 1728, BLUE ENAMEL CROSSED SWORDS MARK

Details
A Meissen puzzle wine-pot
Circa 1728, blue enamel crossed swords mark
Of oval form, moulded as swirling turquoise waves with black shading and with two iron-red and gilt-scaled fish with a Böttger lustre shell above, a similarly decorated large fish, its tail forming the handle and a dolphin forming the spout, on a short oval foot, the underside with a tapering conical aperture (restoration to spout and to handle terminal)
8¾in. (22cm.) wide

Lot Essay

Two Chinese examples are in the Porzellansammlung Dresden, illustrated by Ulrich Pietsch, Meissener Porzellan und siene Ostasiatischen Vorbilder (1996), pls. 46 and 47 together with a Meissen example.

There are three Meissen examples in Dresden with Japanese Palace inventory numbers with different handles and spouts. See Otto Walcha, Meissener Porzellan (1973), pl. 36 and p.465, no. 22 for two of the examples. The first formed as a teapot with fish head spout, the second with plain spout and handle. The present example with similarly moulded body to the other examples but with dolphin-head spout and shorter fish-tail handle.

The use of the blue enamel crossed swords mark would suggest that this piece was intended for Lemaire.

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