A blue and white Pronk 'arbour' plate

CIRCA 1739

Details
A blue and white Pronk 'arbour' plate
Circa 1739
Finely painted in underglaze blue with a lady seated in a garden pavilion with two attending servants and three children in the foreground by a pond with ducks, the well and rim painted with twelve shaped panels of fruit, flowers and insects reserved on a trellis-pattern ground interspersed with shell and palmette motifs, gilding
26 cm. diam.

Lot Essay

This design made by Cornelis Pronk, in 1737, was the fourth and last drawing he made for the Dutch East India Company; it was sent to Batavia by the Heeren XVII in 1738 and received in Canton in 1739. See C.J.A. Jörg, Pronk Porcelain, pp. 34-37 for a discussion on this design; ibid, colour pl. IX and cat no.48 for a similar example in the Groninger Museum. Jörg explains that the earlier designs are reported to have 'proved quite expensive and for this reason they did not dare to have the whole quantity made as had been requested'. It was probably for this reason that this design was only made in underglaze-blue and white, and in famille rose enamels. A similar plate was sold in our Amsterdam Rooms on 26 October 1993, lot 146. Cf. Howard & Ayers, China for the West, vol. I, p. 301, no.295.

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