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the Jiajing reign, which relate closely to porcelain traded by the Portuguese in the
                                                             1550s. Other shards with blue-and-white and Kinrande decoration, dating to the early
                                                             Wanli reign, are similar to those traded by the Spanish in the mid 1570s. Thus the
                                                             porcelain may have been brought as booty taken from the Portuguese or Spanish,
                                                             or by the Early Companies that preceded the  VOC.  These finds confirm that
                                                             porcelain was incidentally found in Dutch households as early as the second half of the
                                                             sixteenth century.
                                                                 By the turn of the century, porcelain was being imported into the Northern
                                                             Netherlands in a more structured way as part of private consignments. Porcelain, both
                                                             fine and coarse, was also being brought as booty seized from Portuguese ships trading
                                                             in Asia. The Directors of the newly established VOC immediately began to instruct
                                                             the Company servants in Bantam and Patani to purchase porcelain of various specific
                                                             types to satisfy the taste and demand not only of the Dutch domestic market but
                                                             also the international markets in Europe. The range of porcelain that according to
                                                             the Directors could be sold in Amsterdam was both fine and coarse, and included
                                                             Kraak. Visual sources attest to the importation of Kraak klapmutsen, saucer dishes,
                                                             dishes and ‘crow cups’ as early as 1603. Textual sources indicate that by 1617 the
                                                             enourmous quantities of porcelain imported into the now Dutch Republic governed
                                                             by the States General also included porcelain made at the private kilns of Zhangzhou.
                                                             The supply and demand, however, was difficult to regulate at this time. Trade was
                                                             not only conducted by the VOC but also by Dutch private individuals. Although
                                                             the VOC tried to limit the private porcelain imports because they affected not only
                                                             the purchase price in Asia but also the types available for sale in the Dutch Republic,
                                                             the Company employees despite the menace of punishement and confiscations clearly
                                                             ignored the limits imposed. Surviving bills of lading, maritime archaeological finds
                                                             from  VOC ships, and various Dutch visual sources have shown that the Dutch
                                                             imported smilar types of Jingdezhen, Zhangzhou and Dehua porcelain to those traded
 Visual sources depicting interiors also attest to the presence of considerable   Fig. 3.2.1.25  Family in interior  by the Portuguese and Spanish. Most of the porcelain imported was blue-and-white
 quantities of porcelain in the Dutch Republic at this time giving us an insight on the   Oil on panel, 86cm x 118cm  of the Kraak and so-called Transitional types, but it also included small quantities of
 Anonymous, Dutch Republic, c.1630
 variety of porcelain available and the manner in which porcelain was displayed in the   Musée d’Art et d’Histoire, Geneva    Kinrande, Linglong, Blanc de chine and porcelain decorated with overglaze enamels.
 domestic sphere. An anonymous painting dating to c.1630–1635, possibly depicting   (inv. no. BASZ 5)  A few types of blue-and-white porcelain made for the Chinese domestic market were
 a West Frisian interior, shows the top ledge of a wooden wall panelling filled with   also imported in small quantities. The Dutch acquired the porcelain from Chinese
 a row of 15 Kraak dishes, and another in front of 20 Kraak bowls and cups, some   junk traders who initially brought trade goods to Bantam, and then to Batavia (VOC
 of which appear to be decorated in the so-called Transitional style (Fig. 3.2.1.25).    462   Published in Van Campen, 2002, p. 26, fig. 3; Sargent,   headquarters in Asia) and for a brief period also to Formosa. To maintain a regular
 462
 Small porcelain pieces with similar blue-and-white decoration could also be placed on   2012, p. 12, fig. 8; and Van Campen, 2014, p. 194,   supply of porcelain to the Dutch Republic, the Company employees in these Asian
 fig. 3. Kraak dishes with panelled rim borders and
 top of the lintel above the door, while others of larger size were arranged symmetrically   small bowls with continuous scenes in the so-called   settlements were forced to acquire any porcelain brought by the junks, even if not
 on top of a cupboard. This is clear in an inventory drawn up after the death of Jan   Transitional style continued to appear depicted,   entirely satisfied in terms of quality. The VOC was greatly concerned with making
 usually arranged symmetrically on shelves, in group
 Bassé (1571/76–1636), a painter, dealer and art collector, which mentions that he   portraits of the 1650s, as evidenced by the painting   choices that offered the higest possible profits when purchasing or ordering porcelain,
 Interior with a Dordrecht Family dated 1656 by the
 had two collector’s cabinets, with porcelain both on top and inside the cupboard, as   artist Nicolaes Maes (1634–1693), who worked in his   as they knew that high quality porcelain was preferred in the Dutch Republic.
 well as pieces of porcelain in various drawers.  This manner to display porcelain had   native city Dordrecht and in Amsterdam, housed in   By the early seventeenth century, as Dutch visual sources have demonstrated,
 463
 the Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena. Published
 been used earlier in the Southern Netherlands, as demonstrated by the Sense of Sight,   in Berger Hochstrasser, 2007, p. 146, fig. 80.  there was a great appreciation for porcelain in the Dutch Republic. Porcelain pieces,
 463   Published  in  A.  Bredius,  Künstler-inventare,  The
 one of a cycle of five paintings by Jan Brueghel the Elder and Peter Paul Rubens made   Hague,  1915–1922, Part I, pp. 129–147. Mentioned   mostly of the Kraak type, appear depicted in great detail alongside other imported and/
 for Archduke Albert VII and Isabella Clara Eugenia in 1617–1618, discussed earlier     in C. W. Fock, ‘Kunst en rariteiten in het Hollandse   or local objects in paintings of laid tables. Other paintings indicate that porcelain was
 interieur’, in E. Bergvelt and R. Kistemaker (eds.),
 (Fig. 3.1.3.1a and b).   De Wereld binner Handbereik; Nederlandse kunst-   already incorporated in the daily life of middle class residents by the 1620s, being used
 en rariteitenverzamelingen, 1585–1735, exhibition
 To sum up, written sources have shown that porcelain began to be imported into   catalogue, Amsterdams Historisch Museum, Zwolle   as tableware. Porcelain, however, had also an ornamental function. Textual and visual
 the Northern Netherlands before the foundation of the VOC, in 1602. Only a few   and Amsterdam, 1992, p. 79; and Van Campen, 2014,   sources have shown that formal arrangements of porcelain were adopted for interior
 p. 194. Visual evidence is provided by an anonymous
 well-to-do residents, however, owned a small quantity of porcelain. Archaeological   painting, possibly by Christiaen Coeuershof    decoration by this time. Considerable numbers of pieces were arranged in groups and
 (c.1596–1659),  Portrait  of  an  Enkhuizen  family  in
 excavations  have yielded shards of  Jingdezhen  blue-and-white  porcelain dating to   interior, c.1635, published in Ibid., p. 195, fig. 4.  displayed in separate rooms or cabinets especially created by the princesses of Orange





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