Page 270 - Chinese and japanese porcelain silk and lacquer Canepa
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Fig. 3.4.1.1.22  Shard of a Kraak dish with a   The armorial for the German market was made in the subsequent reign of Tianqi.
                        pseudo-armorial excavated at the site of the   It is a large dish bearing at the centre the quartered arms of Wittelsbach surrounded
                        St. Augustine Church, Macao
                        Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province   by the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece within a panelled border, which is now
                        Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620)  in the Residenz Museum in Munich (Fig. 3.4.1.1.19). It is likely, as mentioned earlier,
                        Macao Museum (inv. no. SA/95_587)
                                                             that it was made for Maximilian I, Duke of Bavaria and Prince Elector of the Holy
                        Fig. 3.4.1.1.23                      Roman Empire (r. 1597–1651) in c.1625.  The exact circumstances of this order are
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                        Stone façade cathedral of St. Paul, built from   unknown. One may, however, wonder if Maximilian’s desire to own porcelain with his
                        1582 to 1602, Macao
                                                             arms at the time he was reigning was related to the Urbino majolica 272-piece set of
                                                             tableware decorated with grotesques and the arms of Bavaria given to his father and
                                                             predecessor, William V (r. 1579–1597), by Francesco Maria II della Rovere, Duke of
                          variations, are depicted on a background of four
                          quadrants on the plates. The quadrants of a plate   Urbino (1549–1631), in 1587.  It is unclear whether this armorial dish was ordered
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                          in the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, show a
                          ruyi-head alternately reserved on honeycomb and   via Macao or Manila, but in all probability the order was made through dynastic
                          Y-diaper grounds; and those in a plate in a private   relations with the Habsburgs. One wonders if this was a single order, or if other such
                          collection in Brazil show  chi-dragons alternating
                          with stylized flowers in white on blue. The quadrants   armorial dishes were made.
                          somewhat resemble that seen on the Galego arms.
                          On the bowl, housed in Lotherthon Hall, Leeds, they   Only two pseudo-armorials have been recorded so far in Kraak porcelain, both
                          are depicted on the interior and on two opposing   dating to the Wanli reign. One is depicted as a shield enclosing an extraordinary hydra
                          sides of the exterior, alternating with an unusual
                          motif, which may depict a covered rectangular   with five animal heads and the heads of a man and a woman, flanked by a scroll
                          container suspended from tied ribbons. A similar
                          motif is found on an early Wanli period bowl as well   inscribed with the Latin motto Sapienti nihil novum (To the wise man nothing is new),
                          as a few dishes. The bowl shows this container motif   on the centre of a large dish (Fig. 3.4.1.1.20)  and a saucer dish,  on the interior of a
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                          on the centre interior. Examples of dishes can be
                          found in the Santos Palace, the Casa-Museu Guerra   small bowl,  on the sides of two bowls of larger size   and a small jar.  On all these
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                          Junqueiro in Porto and a fragment of another was
                          recovered from the shipwreck of the shipwreck San   pieces the pseudo-armorial appears in combination with Buddhist auspicious symbols,
                          Felipe  (1576). This distinctive motif, but omitting   but on the dishes it is also surrounded by a standard Kraak panelled border divided by
 Fig. 3.4.1.1.20  Large Kraak dish with a    the coin, has also been recorded on a fragment
 pseudo-armorial          of a  klapmuts salvaged from the VOC shipwreck   single lines. No source for this pseudo-armorial has yet been identified. It is well-known
 Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  Witte Leeuw (1613). Lion-Goldschmidt, 1984, p. 43,   that the seven-headed hydra within a shield appeared frequently on sixteenth century
                          fig. 79; Impey, 1992, pp. 22–3; Kuwamaya, 1997, p.
 Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620)  59, no. 26; Rinaldi, 1989, p. 110, pl. 105; and Van der
 Diameter: 43.5cm         Pijl-Ketel, 1982, p. 118, inv. no. 7741. For the arms,   prints, as seen for example in a print by Girolamo Porro Padovano (c.1550–1604)
 Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts  see Afonso Eduardo Martins Zuquete (ed.), Armorial   published by Camillo Camilli (c.1560–1615) in 1586 (Fig. 3.4.1.1.21).  It might
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 (inv. no. E84086)        Lusitano.  Geneologia  e  Heráldica,  Lisbon,  1961,
                          p. 172. The plates are published in Sargent, 2000, p. 76,     be related to the Portuguese, as suggested by the saucer dish formerly in the Santos
                          fig. 3; Canepa, 2008/2, pp. 50–51, fig. 24; and Pinto
 Fig. 3.4.1.1.21  Print by Girolamo Porro   de Matos, 2011, pp. 170–171, no. 67.  Palace in Lisbon, a shard of a dish or plate with part of this pseudo-armorial found
 Padovano (c.1550–1604) published by Camillo   853   The shape of these bottles will be discussed in   at a site by the St. Augustine Church in Macao (Fig. 3.4.1.1.22)  and the seven-
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 Camilli (c.1560–1615) in Imprese Illvstri di   section 3.4.1.2 of this Chapter.
 diversi, co’ discorsi, Venice, 1586  854   Five individuals have been suggested as possible   headed hydra depicted on the stone façade of the Cathedral of St. Paul, built from
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