A FAMILLE ROSE ARMORIAL PART DINNER-SERVICE

CIRCA 1755

Details
A FAMILLE ROSE ARMORIAL PART DINNER-SERVICE
circa 1755
Enamelled and gilt at the centre of each piece and to the sides of the bowls and sauce-boat with a coat-of-arms, within a band of chain-pattern in the well, the everted rim with the crest and floral sprays, comprising:
A quatrefoil bowl, supported on four leaf-shaped feet, 12.3/8 in. (31.5 cm.) wide
Three punchbowls, from 14¼ (36.2 cm.) to 11½ in. (29.2 cm.) diam., one with rim chips restuck and two with cracks
An oblong octagonal tureen stand, 14.7/8 in. (37.8 cm.) wide
Fifteen oblong octagonal serving dishes, in pairs from 18 in. (45.7 cm.) to 10 in. (25.4 cm.), three restuck and riveted
A sauce-boat, 8¾ in. (22.2 cm.) long
Thirty-two octagonal plates, 8.5/8 in. 22 cm.) diam., five with chips restuck and partly riveted
Twenty-two soup-plates, 8½ in. (21.6 cm.) diam.
- some with rim chips and frits (75)

Lot Essay

The arms are those of Wood of Copmanthorpe. See D.S. Howard, op.cit., 1974, p.552. This service was probably made for John Wood of Copmanthorpe and Hollin Hall, who assumed the name of Boynton. He inherited Hollin Hall in 1757 and, while aggrandising the ancient family mansion, commissioned a mahogany bookcase/china-cabinet, probably in order to hold part of the family's armorial service. This bookcase relates to a design by Thomas Chippendale of circa 1754 and is being sold in these Rooms, 4 June 1998, lot 153. It has been photographed in situ in Country Life, 14 July 1988, fig.8, displaying part of the service. This service is also referred to in a letter in Country Life, 20 April 1968, showing a detail of the 'woodmen' depicted in the arms, which was taken from one of the punchbowls. On John Wood's death in 1778, Hollin Hall was inherited by his younger brother, Richard Wood, who may well have brought the service back from China, since he was a supercargo in the East India Company and a Member of the Council at Canton in 1756 and 1760.

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