A RARE SET OF FIVE PEWTER FIGURES OF WESTERNERS
A RARE SET OF FIVE PEWTER FIGURES OF WESTERNERS

FIRST HALF 19TH CENTURY

Details
A RARE SET OF FIVE PEWTER FIGURES OF WESTERNERS
FIRST HALF 19TH CENTURY
Comprising a pair with topknots, possibly meant to be African, bearing pricket sticks, and three wearing brimmed hats and bearing offering bowls, two kneeling in mirror image and a third squatting, all wearing buttoned topcoats over buttoned vests and knee breeches and pierced and molded plinths, traces of polychrome paint remaining, the taller figures each with a two-character workshop mark impressed on the base
4 to 6¾ in. (10.2 to 7.1 cm.) high (5)

Lot Essay

C. Crossman illustrates a large and magnificent set of five pewter Westerners in The China Trade, p. 369, and writes "A very small number of pairs and groups of pewter (oriental) figures in the form of westerners wearing tall hats are known...and would appear to have been made in the late 18th century although they are difficult to date". Most interestingly he also illustrates a gouache from the collection of the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, showing the interior of a Canton pewter shop circa 1830, where we can see the variety of wares available to the early 19th century Western shopper.

In A Tale of Three Cities, pp. 195-99, D.S. Howard illustrates a number of versions of the type, demonstrating that most, if not all, were servant figures, ranging from European to Turkish, Persian and Southeast Asian. One pair (no. 260), very like the tall figures here, he dates to circa 1810. Howard also shows us two earlier Chinese bronzes featuring Westerners. In Chinese ceramics, also, the tradition of servant figures bearing vases or other offerings is well-known, and must have been adapted by the pewtersmiths to intrigue their clientele.

A pair of pewter figures bearing a tray was sold Northeast Auctions, 17 August 2002, lot 600.

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