TWO CHINESE EXPORT PORCELAIN 'ENGLISH MARKET' ARMORIAL JUGS AND COVERS AND A CHARGER
TWO CHINESE EXPORT PORCELAIN 'ENGLISH MARKET' ARMORIAL JUGS AND COVERS AND A CHARGER
TWO CHINESE EXPORT PORCELAIN 'ENGLISH MARKET' ARMORIAL JUGS AND COVERS AND A CHARGER
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TWO CHINESE EXPORT PORCELAIN 'ENGLISH MARKET' ARMORIAL JUGS AND COVERS AND A CHARGER
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PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF MARVIN DAVIDSON
TWO CHINESE EXPORT PORCELAIN 'ENGLISH MARKET' ARMORIAL JUGS AND COVERS AND A CHARGER

KANGXI/YONGZHENG PERIOD, CIRCA 1722-1723

Details
TWO CHINESE EXPORT PORCELAIN 'ENGLISH MARKET' ARMORIAL JUGS AND COVERS AND A CHARGER
KANGXI/YONGZHENG PERIOD, CIRCA 1722-1723
Each painted with the coat-of-arms of Fortescue and Dormer in underglaze blue, gilt and colors within a band of gilt and iron-red cell pattern, the rim of the charger and the covers and necks of the jugs with gilt and painted shells and scrolls amid floral sprays and the dog crest of the arms in shaded white enamel
12 7⁄8 in. (32.7 cm.) diameter, the charger
Provenance
With Henry Moog, Atlanta.

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Lot Essay

The present ewers and charger derive from the iron-red and polychrome service made circa 1722 for John Fortescue-Acland, later 1st Baron Fortescue of Credan, who married Elizabeth Dormer in 1721. Also extant is a service with the same arms, apparently commissioned simultaneously with the present service, but executed in blue-and-white with gilt embellishment. Discussing the twin services, David Sanctuary Howard writes "it was not uncommon to order two armorial services with the same arms at the same time – one in underglaze blue and one in polychrome (usually rouge-de-fer and gold). The purpose is not clear – perhaps one for the country estate and one for London, or perhaps as 'best' and 'everyday'". For the full discussion and a plate from each service, see D.S. Howard, The Choice of the Private Trader: The Private Market in Chinese Export Porcelain Illustrated from the Hodroff Collection, London, 1994, p. 55, nos. 26 and 27.

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