Page 198 - Chinese and japanese porcelain silk and lacquer Canepa
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Fig. 3.2.1.20  Blue-and-white saucer dishes
 excavated at Dokke, Vlissingen, in use
 between 1600 and 1650          Fig. 3.2.1.21  Still life with a pewter
 Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  pitcher and a Chinese bowl
 Ming dynasty, Wanli/Chongzhen reign   Oil on oak, 66.5cm x 50.5cm
 (1573–1644)                 Jan Janz Treck (1605/6–1652), dated 1645
 © Sebastiaan Ostkamp     Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest (inv. no. 1064)





 to 1650, that saucer-dishes of this exact form with the fishing net pattern on both   between the end of the Ming and the rise of the Qing   to be with us in nearly daily use with the common people’. 444  A few group portrait
 the interior and exterior were recovered from the Hatcher junk (c.1643),  and that   dynasty, conducting astronomical, geographical   paintings indicate that porcelain was used as tableware in middle-class households by
 441
 and topographical observations. In 1651, Martini
 one appears depicted turned upside-down alongside a Kraak klapmuts in a still life   returned back to Europe via the Philippines and   the late 1620s. These include a painting entitled Family in Prayer before Mealtime by
 Batavia (present-day Jakarta), where he was taken
 painting by the Amsterdam artist Jan Janz Treck (1605/6–1652), dated 1645, proves   prisoner for one year by the Dutch. He then travelled   an unknown artist, dated 1627, which depicts a Kraak cup, of the type known as ‘crow
 that this type of saucer-dish was imported into the Dutch Republic in the early 1640s    to Bergen in Norway, to Hamburg in Germany and   cup’, with a simplified version of its panelled decoration containing berries alongside
 finally to Amsterdam in the Dutch Republic, where
 (Fig. 3.2.1.21).    he published his  Novus Atlas Sinensis. The atlas   traditional pewter tableware with bread or a large cooked fowl (Fig. 3.2.1.22). 445
 442
 included 15 maps of provinces that formed the
 Porcelain, as has been shown in the previous pages, made frequent appearance on   Chinese Empire at the time Martini lived there. It   This ‘crow cup’, probably dating to the Wanli or Tianqi reigns, is similar to extant
 the laid tables depicted in still life paintings of various artists of the Dutch Republic   was first published as the sixth volume of Theatrum   examples, such as the one in the Princessehof Museum in Leeuwarden (Fig. 3.2.1.23).
 Orbis Terrarium by the Dutchman Johan Blaeuw. A
 in the early seventeenth century. 443  A closer examination of these paintings reveals a   detail showing the Guanyin is published in Donnelly,   A painting entitled Merry Company by the Haarlem artist Isack Elyas, dated 1629,
 pp. 134–135; John Ayers, ‘Blanc-de-Chine: Some
 variety of porcelain shapes mainly brought to the Dutch Republic as cargoes of the   Reflections’,  Transactions of the Oriental Ceramic   alludes  to the  Five  Senses  depicting  a group  of well-dressed people  enjoying food,
 VOC, all depicted in great detail together with other imported and/or local objects.   Society, Vol. 51, 1986–1987, p. 29, fig. 17; Kerr and   drink and music seated around a table with pewter plates, a salt, and a jug, together
 Ayers, et. al., 2002, p. 29, fig. 17; and Canepa, 2012/3,
 The artists’ careful observation and rendering of the various pieces of porcelain and   p. 3, fig. 3.  with a Kraak plate with a panelled rim border that is also being used to serve berries
 438   For an example in the Virginia Museum of Fine
 their painted decorative motifs undoubtedly denotes the great appreciation that   Arts  in  Richmond,  Bequest  of  Forrest R. Brauer     (Fig. 3.2.1.24). 446  A few other similar examples, as noted by Spriggs and Berger
 (85. 1502), see Ayers, 2002 p. 99, no. 50.
 porcelain had in the Dutch Republic at the time. The majority of pieces depicted   439   Sheaf and Kilburn, 1988, p. 73, pl. 113 and Apendix A.   Hochstrasser, are known.
                                                                                 447
 seem to be Kraak porcelain, thus confirming the information provided by the VOC   440   Published in Ostkamp, 2014, pp. 75–76, fig. 28. A   Tecklim for a total of 146,000 pieces, including 5,000   In the Dutch Republic, porcelain not only had a practical function, but also
 blue-and-white  wine  cup  with  a  similar  fishing  net   small ‘net’ dishes. Cited in Ibid., Appendix B, p. 169.
 documents as well as marine and land archaeological finds discussed above.   pattern on the exterior and a single fish on the centre   442   Published in N.R.A Vroom,  De schilders van   ornamental. As recently noted by Bischoff, documentary evidence shows that formal
 By the early 1610s, porcelain appears to have been already incorporated in the   interior is found in the Sir Percival David Collection   het  monochrome  banketje,  N.V.  Uitgevers-Mij   arrangements of porcelain were adopted for interior decoration in the Dutch Republic
                          “Kosmos”, Amsterdam, 1945, p. 163, no. 143.
 now housed at the British Museum in London.
 daily life of middle class residents. The historian Johannes Isaäcs Pontanus (1571–  Published in Stacey Pierson,  Illustrated Catalogue   443   For a comprehensive study on the porcelain depicted   by the early decades of the seventeenth century. Female members of the House of
 of Underglaze Blue and Copper red Decorated   in Dutch paintings, see Berger Hochstrasser, 2007.
 1639) in his book describing Amsterdam and its history, published in Latin in 1611   Porcelains in the Percival David Foundation of   444   Cited in Volker, 1954, p. 23; and Berger Hochstrasser,   Orange not only collected large quantities of porcelain, but also had separate rooms
                          2007, p. 133.
 Chinese Art, London, 2004, p. 103, no. C615.
 and in Dutch in 1614, notes that ‘the East India traffic has brought a large amount of   441   Two of these saucer-dishes, one of them shown   445   Published in Van der Pijl-Ketel, 1982, p. 35; and   or cabinets in their palaces specially created to display pieces of porcelain arranged
 porcelain to the Netherlands … that is why one must conclude about the porcelains,   upside down, are published in Sheaf and Kilburn,   Berger Hochstrasser, 2007, pp. 128 and 130, fig. 64.   in groups. For instance, Louise de Coligny (1555–1620), fourth and last wife of
 1988, p. 45, pl. 55. In April 1643, the VOC placed   446   Published in Van der Pijl-Ketel, 1982, p. 35.
 the abundance of which grows daily, that only because of these navigations they come   an order of porcelain with the Chinese merchant   447   Spriggs, 1964–1966; and Berger Hochstrasser, 2007.  Stadtholder William I of Orange, had 285 pieces of porcelain in one room at the



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