Page 26 - For the Love of Porcelain
P. 26

The            Countess                          and




                                        her           Chinese                      Lions                               Although the subject of this article (ceramic models of Chinese lions) may seem a little


                                                                                                                       frivolous, it chimes well with the breadth of interests pursued by eva Ströber.
                                                                                                                                                                                                         rose Kerr









                                                                                                                       For example, her 2011 catalogue Symbols on
                                                                                                                       Chinese Porcelain: 10,000 x Happiness  and
                                                                                                                       accompanying exhibition at Leeuwarden,
                                                                                                                       introduced works of art in a manner that
                                                                                                                       was accessible to a diverse audience. This
                                                                                                                       ‘popular’ subject was backed up by serious
                                                                                                                       academic research, and yet presented in a
                                                                                                                       way that people would find attractive.

                                                                                                                       In similar vein, I discuss porcelain figurines
                                                                                                                       in an old Swedish collection, that I recently
                                                                                                                       had the pleasure of cataloguing. 1  The
                                                                                                                       collection belonged to Countess Wilhelmina
                                                                                                                       von Hallwyl, who amassed nearly 1000
                                                                                                                       pieces of Chinese porcelain, alongside rich
                                                                                                                       collections of European paintings, ceramics,
                                                                                                                       silver, furniture, glass and textiles. She died
                                                                                                                       in 1930, and bequeathed her house in  acquisition of Asian ceramics was in 1879,  2
                                                                                                                       central Stockholm and her entire collection   and she continued to collect until her death   Architectural lion with
                                                                                                                       to the Swedish state.                in 1930. She travelled and purchased widely,   a seated warrior,
                                                                                                                       Wilhelmina was born into the Kempe   but retained a fondness for local sources,  Qing dynasty,
                                                                                                                       family, a wealthy and entrepreneurial clan.  chief among them the Stockholm auction  19th - 20th century,
                                                                                                                       Carl Kempe, famous for his collections of  house Bukowski’s. Its splendid premises lay   h. 44 cm,
                                                                                                                       Chinese ceramics and silver, was her first  a few hundred metres from her front door,   inv. no. XLVIII: VI:
                                                                                                                       cousin once removed. In 1865 she married   and the Countess was a frequent visitor  B.a.01
                                                                                                                       Count Walther von Hallwyl, and in 1883  there. In fact, most of the porcelain figurines
           1                                                                                                           moved to Stockholm in order for the Count   discussed in this essay were bought from
            Pair of lion mounts, late                                                                                  to succeed his recently deceased father-in-  Bukowski’s between 1906 and 1912.
                   Ming dynasty,                                                                                       law as head of the family-owned company,
               16th–17th century,                                                                                      Ljusne-Woxna AB. Wilhelmina’s father left  At this period Bukowski’s, like many other
                    h. 22.8 cm,                                                                                        a large fortune to his daughter, his only heir,   European dealers, had just started to receive
               inv. no. XLVIII:VII:                                                                                    and she used her inheritance to indulge  antiquities that had come directly from
                      A.b.a.03                                                                                         in her passion for collecting. Her first  China. This was the era when Sweden became

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