A MEISSEN ROYAL PLATE FROM THE 'YELLOW HUNTING SERVICE'
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more
A MEISSEN ROYAL PLATE FROM THE 'YELLOW HUNTING SERVICE'

1733-34, BLUE CROSSED SWORDS MARK, JAPANESE PALACE INVENTORY NUMBER .N148- W

Details
A MEISSEN ROYAL PLATE FROM THE 'YELLOW HUNTING SERVICE'
1733-34, BLUE CROSSED SWORDS MARK, JAPANESE PALACE INVENTORY NUMBER .N148- W
Painted in the Kakiemon palette, the centre painted with a flying phoenix among three flowering chrysanthemum and peony plants within a chrysanthemum-shaped panel, the border with three shaped quatrefoil cartouches painted with flowering chrysanthemum, peony and prunus plants all reserved on a bright yellow ground, brown line rim (some rubbing around central reserve, very slight wear to rim)
9 in. (22.9 cm.) diam.
Provenance
Augustus II, King of Poland and Elector of Saxony, Japanese Palace, Dresden.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

Cf. Dieter Hoffmeister, op. cit. (Hamburg, 1999), Vol. II, pp. 412-413, no. 272 for a similar plate, and where he notes that this is the only Meissen dinner-service known to have a coloured ground. The service only had 39 plates, one of which was broken at a dinner held for the King of Prussia on 2nd September 1777. According to a surviving invoice the service was delivered to the Japanese Palace in 1734. See also Ingelore Menzhausen, Alt-Meissner Porzellan in Dresden, no. 82 for a tureen and a fluted dish from the same service. Two plates from the service (with the same inventory numbers as this plate) were sold in the Johanneum Duplicate Sale, Dresden, 1920, lots 145 and 146 (pl. 9). Another plate, from the Deane Johnson Collection, Bel Air, was sold by Sotheby's New York on 9th December 1972, lot 67, and another by Christie's Geneva on 9th May 1988, lot 63.

The yellow ground was derived from the yellow and blue hunting livery of the Electoral Huntsmen. Both colours were used on the garniture of vases made about six years later for Augustus III's hunting castle, Schloss Hubertusburg, a pair of which were sold in these Rooms on 12th October 1995, lot 70.

More from British and Continental Ceramics

View All
View All