A Dutch market 'south sea bubble' plate
A Dutch market 'south sea bubble' plate

CIRCA 1725

Details
A Dutch market 'south sea bubble' plate
Circa 1725
Painted in underglaze blue, gilt and famille verte enamels, with a central Commedia dell'Arte harlequin figure in chequered trousers turning his body sideways with one leg raised in the air, inscribed 'Schyt Actien en wind-handel' (Shares and Swindle), all below a freely drawn frieze of overlapping leaves at the rim (minute rim restoration)
21 cm. diam.

Lot Essay

This plate is one out of a series of six satirising the 'South Sea Bubble' mania which came to a collapse in 1720. The subject matter was to warn Dutch speculators not to set up a similar company in Holland. Some refer to this series as the 'Great Scene of Folly' and believe it ridiculed Dutch shareholders of the Dutch East India Company. However it is generally agreed that the series was created as a satirical attack on the financial world of the first quarter of the 18th Century. For a further discussion see D. Howard & J. Ayers, China for the West, vol.I, pp. 234-235; L. Bluss, Tribuut aan China, pp. 92-94; and C. Jrg, Chinese Export Porcelain, Royal Museums of Art and History, Brussels, Exhibition Catalogue, pp. 116-117.

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