Page 55 - Mounted Oriental Porcelain Getty Museum
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6. LIDDED BOWL

                             THE PORCELAIN: Japanese (Imari), early eighteenth century
                                     THE SILVER MOUNTS: French (Paris), 1717-22

             HEIGHT: 83/4 in. (22.3 cm); WIDTH: io5/s in. (27.1 cm); DIAMETER: 83/s in. (21.2 cm)

                                                                    74.Di.Z7

    FIG. 6A         DESCRIPTION

                   The deep straight-sided bowl and shallow lid are
             enameled with iron red and gilt over underglaze blue
             with chrysanthemum branches on a white ground. Some
             of the flowers are molded in low relief, created by slip.
             The body is covered with a typical Imari blue-tinged
             translucent glaze. The foot of the lid (an inverted dish) is
             painted with a classic scroll in underglaze blue.

                   The bowl is mounted around the rim and foot with
             silver and fitted at each side with a silver handle attached
             to pierced strapwork that joins the rim to the foot. The
             lid is similarly mounted around its lower edge and is
             surmounted by a finial. The rim of the bowl is encircled
             by a simple molding, the foot by a larger gadrooned
             molding. The handle at each side springs from pierced,
             foliate, scrolled, and interlacing strapwork that is at-
             tached to the moldings above and below by pinned
             hinges (fig. 6A). The lid is encircled by a gadrooned
             molding around the rim and surmounted by a tall finial
             in the form of a leaf cup that contains a grape cluster set
             on a low cylindrical base of silver embellished with
             gadrooning and acanthus. This fits over the porcelain
             foot of the inverted dish, which functions as a lid.

                   MARKS
                   The silver mounts are struck with the following
             Parisian marks. On the base of the silver knop: a fleur-
             de-lys; on the rim of the lid: a fleur-de-lys, a butterfly,
             and a salmon's head (fig. 6B); on each handle: a fleur-de
             lys and a butterfly; on the upper rim of the lid: a fleur-
             de-lys; on the rim of the bowl: a butterfly, a fleur-de-lys,
             and a dog's head (fig. 6c). A butterfly is the counter mark
             used between May 6, 1722, and September 2, 1727,
             under the fermier Charles Cordier. A salmon's head is

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