A QUANTITY OF CHINESE EXPORT ARMORIAL MOTHER-OF-PEARL GAMING COUNTERS
A QUANTITY OF CHINESE EXPORT ARMORIAL MOTHER-OF-PEARL GAMING COUNTERS

18TH/19TH CENTURY

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A QUANTITY OF CHINESE EXPORT ARMORIAL MOTHER-OF-PEARL GAMING COUNTERS
18TH/19TH CENTURY
Approximately ninety, all carved with a crest or coat-of-arms, some with pierced borders, deep carving or shaped as fish; together with several non-armorial examples and a black and gilt lacquer box (90)

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拍品專文

Beginning as early as 1720 gaming counters of mother-of-pearl were made in China for Western card and game players. A selection was exhibited in A Tale of Three Cities: Canton, Shanghai and Hong Kong (p. 243) where D. S. Howard notes that "the finest were armorial", often made for the same families as the great porcelain services. A set made for Abigail Quincy, sister-in-law of Samuel Shaw, was exhibited at the Peabody Museum, Salem (Directly from China: Export Goods for the American Market, 1984).

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