A rare famille rose 'Amsterdam Waterfront' plate
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A rare famille rose 'Amsterdam Waterfront' plate

CIRCA 1765

Details
A rare famille rose 'Amsterdam Waterfront' plate
Circa 1765
Painted en grisaille, iron-red, blue, green and pink enamels with a view of the Nieuwe Stadsherberg on the waterfront of Amsterdam, two rowing boats with figures in 18th Century dress in the foreground of the two-storey inn, a larger craft to the right and numerous masts and flags visible in the background, the border with scattered flower sprays
23 cm. (9 in.) diam.
Provenance
Mak van Waay; Amsterdam, 25 november 1974, lot 252 (to Dreesmann).
Dr Anton C.R. Dreesmann (inventory no. J-25).
Special notice
Christie's charges a Buyer's premium calculated at 20.825% of the hammer price for each lot with a value up to €90,000. If the hammer price of a lot exceeds €90,000 then the premium for the lot is calculated at 20.825% of the first €90,000 plus 11.9% of any amount in excess of €90,000. Buyer's Premium is calculated on this basis for each lot individually.

Lot Essay

The Nieuwe Stadsherberg was a public house built in 1662 and demolished in 1872. It was situated on the River IJ in Amsterdam and was a popular place for sailors of the Dutch East India Company (V.O.C.) to spend their last hours before leaving the port for the Orient, and often their first hours when they returned from their voyage. It has been suggested that plates with this design may have been commissioned to mark the centenary of the Nieuwe Stadsherberg. No exact print source for this decoration has been found, but several similar views can be found on engravings: C. Le Corbeiller illustrates one (published 1664) in China Trade Porcelain: Patterns of Exchange, New York, 1974, p. 108, together with a plate of this design in the Metropolitan Museum of Art; D. F. Lunsingh Scheurleer illustrates another (published 1769) in an article, 'De Nieuwe Stadsherberg in het IJ voor Amsterdam op Chinees porselein', Antiek, May 1968, pp. 484-486, where he clarifies the correct attribution of location for this design and illustrates a cup and saucer with additional coronet and wreath. See also the Mottahedeh example, illustrated by D. Howard and J. Ayers, China for the West, London and New York, 1974, vol. I, no. 190, p. 193. Other plates, from the Philip Suval Collection are illustrated by F. and N. Hervouët and Y. Bruneau, La Porcelaine des Compagnies des Indes à Décor Occidental, Paris, 1986, fig. 1.3; from the Stodel Collection, Amsterdam, are illustrated by D. F. Lunsingh Scheurleer, Chinese Export Porcelain, London, 1974, fig. 243 and p. 223; and yet another from her own collection is illustrated by E. Gordon, Collecting Chinese Export Porcelain, London, 1978, p. 16.

A very similar plate was sold at Christie's, London, 15 November 2000, lot 295; at Christie's, New York, 25 and 26 January 2000, lot 162; and another one in New York, 21 January 1999, lot 84.

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