A Meissen two-handled oval dish from the Swan service
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus bu… Read more
A Meissen two-handled oval dish from the Swan service

1737-1741, BLUE CROSSED SWORDS MARKS, PRESSNUMMER 27

Details
A Meissen two-handled oval dish from the Swan service
1737-1741, blue crossed swords marks, Pressnummer 27
Modelled by J.J. Kändler and J.F. Eberlein, the centre crisply moulded with two swans swimming in rough water between clumps of bulrushes, a heron wading with a fish in its beak to the left and another in flight above, on a radiating shell-moulded ground, the bulrushes extending to form two gilt bulrush handles, the border moulded with radiating flutes and painted with scattered indianische Blumen and flowerheads and centred at the top with the Brühl coat-of-arms within a waved gilt dentil and line rim
13¾ in. (35 cm.) wide
Provenance
Anon., sale Galerie Jürg Stuker, November 1967, lot 87
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus buyer's premium.

Lot Essay

The Swan service was made for Count Brühl (1700-1763), the Prime Minister of Saxony and director of the Meissen factory from 1733-63. Brühl commissioned the service in 1737 on the occasion of his marriage to Maria Anna Franziska von Kolowrat-Krakowska. The moulded decoration was carried out by J.J. Kändler with the assistance of J.F. Eberlein. It would appear to be the largest service produced in the 18th century and Rainer Rückert (Meissen Porzellan 1710-1810 [Munich 1966], p. 118) estimates its original size to have been between 2,200 and 2,400 pieces. Kändler began work on the larger pieces for the service in the summer of 1737, when work on the large armorial service for Graf Sulkowski was still not complete. As director of the factory, Brühl would have been more than aware of Sulkowski's commission, which at the time was the largest privately commissioned armorial service to date, and it is probable that Brühl intended to compete with Sulkowski (see footnote to lot 38). The service remained in the possession of the family until after the Second World War.

An oval dish of similar size was sold in these Rooms on 1st March 1993, lot 53 and another from the Nyffler Collection was sold in these Rooms on 9th June 1986, lot 119.

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