Page 77 - Mounted Oriental Porcelain Getty Museum
P. 77
FIG. i2,B
Another pair of deep blue vases, mounted as ewers, "La garniture en bronze dore d'or moulu de deux vases
with very similar lip mounts, passed through the Lon- de la Chine, de quoi en fait deux buires . . . 288 livres."6
don auction rooms in 1924.4
PUBLICATIONS
Mounted porcelains of this type listed in the Livre-
journal of Lazare Duvaux were invariably highly priced; Wilson 1979, p. 42, no. 6; Watson 1980, p. 52,
a typical example is the sale to Madame de Pompadour no. 28; Watson 1981, pp. 26-33; Watson 1986, no. 19;
on December 6, 1751, "Deux autres vases en hauteur de Bremer-David et al. 1993, pp. 153-54, no. 257.
porcelaine celadon ancienne, monies en forme de buire
en bronze cisele doree d'or moulu . . . 1,680 livres."5 EXHIBITIONS
Chinese Porcelains in European Mounts, The China
Another entry in the Livre-journal provides evi- Institute in America, New York, 1980, no. 28; Mounted
dence of the cost of transforming vases into ewers: on Oriental Porcelain, The Frick Collection, New York,
July 15, 1750, Duvaux sold to le Chevalier de Genssin 1986, no. 19.
64 PAIR OF EWERS