A MEISSEN ARMORIAL PLATE FROM THE SULKOWSKI SERVICE AND TWO MEISSEN LOBED PLATES
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… 顯示更多
A MEISSEN ARMORIAL PLATE FROM THE SULKOWSKI SERVICE AND TWO MEISSEN LOBED PLATES

CIRCA 1735-40, BLUE CROSSED SWORDS MARKS, DREHER'S QUARTERED CIRCLE TO FOOTRIM OF FIRST

細節
A MEISSEN ARMORIAL PLATE FROM THE SULKOWSKI SERVICE AND TWO MEISSEN LOBED PLATES
CIRCA 1735-40, BLUE CROSSED SWORDS MARKS, DREHER'S QUARTERED CIRCLE TO FOOTRIM OF FIRST
The first plate painted with two armorial escutcheons and a coronet flanked by lion supporters, on a draped plinth and surrounded by scattered indianische Blumen within a Sulkowski ozier-moulded lobed border (surface scratching and wear to enamels and gilding); the second plate after a design by J.G. Höroldt with a bird perched on a branch before flowering peony, the Sulkowski ozier-moulded border with indianische Blumen; the third painted with two cranes and flowering shrubs below a bird in flight within a similar border (wear to well at 7 o'clock, further slight wear)
The first 9 3/8 in. (23.7 cm.) wide (3)
注意事項
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

榮譽呈獻

Rodney Woolley
Rodney Woolley

查閱狀況報告或聯絡我們查詢更多拍品資料

登入
瀏覽狀況報告

拍品專文

This first plate is from a large service produced between 1735 and 1738 for Graf Alexander Joseph von Sulkowski (1695-1762). The Sulkowski arms, on the left side, are surrounded by the sash and badge of the Order of the White Eagle. The arms on the right are those of Marie Anna Franziska von Stain zu Jettingen (1712-1741), who married Graf Sulkowski in 1738.

D Sulkowski was one of Augustus III's Cabinet Ministers, and among other things supervised the completion of the Japanese Palace and the deliveries of porcelain to the Palace. In 1733 he was created a Count by the Holy Roman Emperor Karl VI, and he was put in command of Augustus's troops in Poland from 1735, and of the troops fighting the Turks in 1737. In 1738 he was dismissed and returned to his estate in Poland. At the time of commission, the Sulkowski Service was the first privately commissioned armorial service of large size which was designed to order. The basket-weave 'Sulkowski' ozier borders were in fact introduced at Meissen in 1732. See Julius Lessing, 'Das Porzellangeschirr Sulkowski' Kunstgewerbeblatt, Vol. 4 (Leipzig, 1888), pp. 43-8, where this service was first discussed. Shortly after this article was published the majority of the service was sold. The remaining pieces were kept by the family in Poland until the 1960s when they were sold by Sotheby's London on 23rd May 1967, lots 29-50. For a large dish from this service now in the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg, see D. Hoffmeister, Meissener Porzellan Des 18.Jahrhunderts, Katalog Der Sammlung Hoffmeister (Hamburg, 1999), pp. 526-7, no. 345 and pp. 594-5, no. 16, for a discussion of the service. Three pieces from this service are illustrated by Rainer Rückert, Meissner Porzellan (Munich, 1966); a plate, fig. 490, a candelabrum, pl. 489 and a salt, pl. 487. A pair of plates from the service were recently sold in these Rooms on 11 December 2007, lot 109.