Page 303 - Oriental Series Japan and China, Brinkly
P. 303
PORCELAIN DECORATED
Finally, if careful note is taken of what we have said
about want of solidity on the part of gold applied to porce-
lains in China and Japan, it will be understood that most of
the old specimens thus ornamented ought to be now entirely
deprived of their gold decoration. This peculiarity offered
to modern painters a large field which they have not failed
to exploit. They had only to recover and follow the half-
effaced marks in order to renew the original decoration.
Herein it is the faults of the original gold that enable us
to pronounce apocryphal pieces presenting too fair an ap-
pearance. In fact, if the painter, learning that a piece may
safely be exposed to the low temperature of the gilding fur-
nace, has recourse to the preparations employed in our
studios, his gold decoration will be solidly fixed, brilliant,
and capable of being burnished with an agate. If, on the
contrary, he is content to use gold dust mixed with varnish
and applied without caloric, he obtains a metallic tone resem-
bling more closely the Chinese gold, but having thick, heavy
outlines, which, moreover, may be entirely removed by
scratching with a knife or by washing in an acid solution.
It need scarcely be noted that this obliteration of
the gold decoration is not invariably observed in the
case of old specimens. Much depended, of course,
on the degree of care with which they were kept.
Occasionally pieces are found to which their owners
attached sufficient value to handle them so tenderly
and preserve them so scrupulously that much of the
gold decoration remains as fresh as it was when it
emerged from the kiln. M. du Sartel concludes his
analysis thus :
In fine there remains to be noticed one more variety of
secondary decoration which is of some interest. All ama-
teurs are acquainted with a certain type of blue-and-white
vases, generally cylindrical in form. Those that we desire
to note here have their necks decorated originally with a
slight, narrow border of pattern, their bodies being occupied
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