A LARGE FAMILLE VERTE 'PROVINCES' DISH
A LARGE FAMILLE VERTE 'PROVINCES' DISH

CIRCA 1720

Details
A LARGE FAMILLE VERTE 'PROVINCES' DISH
CIRCA 1720
A large coat-of-arms inscribed BRABANDT in the center on a field finely enamelled with peony stems and butterflies, the well and rim with underglaze blue diaper pattern enclosing aquatic creature cartouches, landscape vignettes, and birds in blossoming boughs
17 1/8 in. (43.5 cm.) diam.

Lot Essay

Series of these dishes, in four related patterns, were ordered in China in the 1720's with the arms of the principle towns and provinces of present-day Belgium and the Netherlands, plus the arms of England and France. 23 different arms seem to comprise each series. Documentary evidence of this order has yet to come to light, but C. Le Corbeiller has pointed out that the spellings suggest a Dutch clientele, and that the grouping suggests the borders of this region after the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht which ended the War of the Spanish Succession. In 1717 a Triple Alliance marked the new rapport of England, France and the Netherlands, and Le Corbeiller posits that the dishes may have commemorated this development. (China Trade Porcelain, pp. 37-39). Dr. C.J.A. Jorg notes that it is unclear why certain arms appear again and again, while other quite major centers like Haarlem and Leiden are not represented at all.
Though individual examples from each series have appeared on the public market periodically, a number of dishes have only been offered four times: the collection of the Duc de X..., Paris, the Palais Galleria, 27 June 1969; Anonymous sale, London, Sotheby's, 6 November 1973, lots 168 to 182; the collection of Benjamin F Edwards III, Christie's New York, 22 January 2002, lots 35 to 42; the collection of Benjamin F. Edwards III, part 2, Christie's, New York, 22 January 2003, lots 41-43.

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