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y Pura Concepción when it wrecked en route to Spain sixteen years later, in 1641   example from the Little Collection was sold at   of  Zhangzhou saucer dishes has now become a unique and fascinating example of
 (Fig. 3.1.2.16). 1005  This letter of 1634, together with the material, textual and visual   auction in Christie’s London, sale 7523, 1 May   porcelain made with European motifs reflecting both Portuguese and Dutch influence,
 2007,  lot  132.  For  more  information  on  British  bell
 evidence discussed earlier, indicates a date of c.1630–1635 for the Wanli shipwreck.   candlesticks, see Journal of the Pewter Society, Vol.   which relate to European sea trade routes, as well as Chinese motifs. The source of the
 5, No. 2 Autumn, 1985.
 From the answer Tayouan sent to Batavia in September 1635 it is clear that the VOC   988   These artifacts are now housed in the Rijksmuseum   Museum, museum no. C.534:4–1923. A wall-tile from   decoration is of Dutch origin, but depicts a sea chart of the coast of Portugal, which
                          this set is published in Wu, 2014, p. 186, fig. 7.34.
 employees were not pleased with the porcelain table plates brought back by the Chinese   in Amsterdam. They were included in the catalogue   998   I am grateful to my PhD supervisor Prof. Dr. Christiaan   according to Suebsman may have served as a guide to the sea route to Zhangzhou. A
 J. Braat e.a. (red.),  Behouden uit het Behouden   Jörg for bringing to my attention this wall-tile and a
 merchants, as it states ‘The table plates were not made with wide and flat enough   Huys. Catalogus van de voorwerpen van de   similar example (damaged) in the Museum Boijmans   few saucer dishes with overglaze enamel decoration include four opposing roundels
 borders like the sample provided’. 1006  Nor they were made with a ‘smooth and glazed   Barentsexpeditie (1596) gevonden op Nova Zembla.   Van Beuningen (acc. no. A 7184). For an image of the   round the rim, each enclosing a Chinese character that read jinyue yuanlai (pleased to
 De Rijksmuseumcollectie, aangevuld met Russische
                          latter wall-tile, see Mees, 1997, p. 331 (top image).
 base, without an edge or rim, suitable to move over the cloth on the table’ as requested   en noorse vondsten, Amsterdam, 1998. I am grateful   999   Anne Gerritsen, ‘Invloed, imitatie en materiële kunst   have arrived whether from far or near), 1013  a proverb from the Analects of Confucius,
 to Jan de Hond, History Department Rijksmuseum,   van de 17e en 18e eeuw’, Aziatische Kunst, Jaargang
 in the Batavia letter of July. 1007  For the latter it seems they accepted the explanation   for this information. For a brief discussion on this   43, Nr. ¾, October 2013, pp. 33–35, fig. 12.    such as the example from the Percival David Collection, now in the British Museum
 given by the Chinese saying that it ‘cannot be omitted, because all the porcelains that   expedition, see Marten Jan Bok, ‘European Artists   1000   Jörg, 1993, p. 188, note 13. The painting on leather   (Fig.  3.4.2.2.11). 1014   A  blue-and-white  saucer  dish  in  the  Herzog  Anton  Ulrich
                           was published earlier in Leonard Blussé, Tribuut
 in the Service of the Dutch East India Company’, in
 are fired must have a rim on the bottom to separate them, otherwise they will fire on   DaCosta Kaufmann and North, 2014, pp. 177–178.   aan China: Vier eeuwn Netherlands-Chinese   Museum in Braunschweig includes on the central scene the characters tianxia diyi,
 989   For an example of this latter type, see David S.   betrekkingen, Amsterdam, 1989, p. 70.
 to each other’. 1008    Howard, The Choice of the Private Trader. The Private   1001   Published in Julia B. Curtis, Chinese Porcelains of   which translates as ‘the best under heaven’. 1015  These dishes, as noted by Sargent and
 In May 1639, Batavia sent an order and samples to Tayouan, which emphasized   Market in Chinese Export Porcelain illustrated from   the Seventeenth Century, Landscapes, Scholar’s   Suebsman, appear to have served not only as sea charts and bringers of good luck, but
 the Hodroff Collection, London, 1994, p. 217, no. 253.
                           Motifs and Narratives, exhibition catalogue, China
 again the orders given in July 1635 and March 1637 not only rejecting the ‘Dutch   990   Blue-and-white porcelain tiles of square shape   Institute Gallery, New York, 1995, p. 35, fig. 1; and   also as self-promotion from the kilns of Zhangzhou where these dishes were made. 1016
 made at Jingdezhen for the domestic market   Canepa, 2008/2, pp. 40–41, fig. 21.
 painting, flower and leafwork’ but also requesting good porcelain material, glaze and   in the late Ming dynasty were usually of larger   1002   Porcelain shards  excavated  from  both  Shibaqiao   From the  VOC documents and extant pieces of porcelain with European shapes
 cobalt blue decoration. 1009  It reads: ‘Hand these samples to the Chinese, let them   size, ranging from about 20 to 22 cm, and had an   and Lianhualing kilns were studied by the author   and/or motifs discussed above it is possible to conclude that the Dutch influence on
 unglazed stepped edge with cut-off corners. For
                           during  a  research  trip  to  Jingdezhen  in  2010.  A
 know that we desire finer ones, that close attention should be paid to the painting and   two examples in the British Museum, dating to   large fragment of a bowl and a shard of a dish of   porcelain made to order at Jingdezhen in the early seventeenth century was much more
 the late sixteenth/early seventeenth century, see   this type excavated at Lianhualing, is published
 especially that all Dutch flower work should be omitted, that the blue should not be   Harrison-Hall, 2001, pp. 325–326, nos. 11:132 and   in Canepa, 2008/2, p. 22, fig. 5. For images of the   prominent than that exerted by the Portuguese and Spanish in the sixteenth and early
 11:133.
 too pale or too dark, as the memorandum shows emphatically, and when you contract   991   For examples, see Ibid.   interior and exterior of a fragment of a bowl of this   seventeenth centuries, though still limited. The Dutch succeeded in having European
                           type excavated from the site, see Cao and Luo,
 for these porcelains for the Chinese, do not commit yourself to the former prices,   992   For this opinion, see Jörg, 2002–2003, p. 22; and   2006, p. 20, figs. 33 and 34.      shapes copied almost exactly as the models provided for use in daily life actvities,
 Ostkamp, 2011, p. 29.  1003   The shard of the bowl is illustrated, together with
 which [former porcelain] indeed is not rare, but clumsy and thick work as seen in the   993   VOC 1116. Cited in Viallé, 1992, p. 9.   Kraak porcelain shards, by Takashi Sakai in the   especially eating and drinking at the dinner table. Their first orders of porcelain with
 samples, and with which Holland thus remains flooded and does not give reasonable   994   VOC 857. Cited in Viallé, 1992, pp. 10–11.   paper  Taiwan  and Southeast Asian  Arts,  Vol.  9,   specific European motifs, however, were not delivered. Later when the Jingdezhen
 995   t is important to note that stylized tulips, carnations
 I
                           Trade in the 17th century-2. The shard of the dish
 profits, but satisfy them and pay to the order and the quality of the wares’. 1010  and other flowers with stiff leaves appear on the rim   illustrated here is published in Lu, 2012, p. 245,   potters finally made the desired porcelain with European motifs, the VOC continued
 panelled borders of a group of Chongzhen  Kraak   fig. 22. I am grateful to Lu Tai-kang for allowing
 To conclude this section of European influence on porcelain it is important   dishes and bowls, usually of large size, such as the   me to include an image of this shard in this    to receive porcelain with Dutch paintings and flowers for some years despite their
                           doctoral dissertation.
 to discuss a group of large and heavily potted saucer dishes decorated in underglaze   bowl illustrated here as Fig. 3.4.2.2.5a and b. They   1004   VOC 857. Cited in Viallé, 1992, p. 11.   repeated instructions to omit it from orders because customers in the homeland did
 also appear on bottle vases, such as the example
 cobalt blue or in overglaze red, turquoise and black enamels which were made in the   in the Topkapi Saray and the shards of another   1005   For a discussion on these bell-cups with ears, see   not regard it as exotic and thus did not want it. It appears that Dutch printed sources
 excavated from the same strata as the tankard   section 3.1.2 of this Chapter, fig. 3.1.2.16.
 late sixteenth or early seventeenth century at the private kilns in the nearby areas   shards at the Shibaqiao kiln site in Jingdezhen   1006   VOC 1116. Cited in Viallé, 1992, p. 13.  also influenced the decoration of a group of dishes in the somewhat cruder porcelain
 of Zhangzhou in Fujian province (Appendix 2). They are decorated with a central   discussed earlier. See Krahl and Ayers, 1986, Vol. II,   1007   VOC 857. Cited in Viallé, 1992, p. 11.  made by the Zhangzhou potters in southern China. The process of ordering porcelain
                        1008   VOC 1116. Cited in Viallé, 1992, p. 13.
 p. 811, no. 1629; and Huang, 2009-2010, p. 95, fig.
 medallion enclosing a marine rose with thin lines radiating outwards, two European   7; respectively. Although, as discussed elsewhere,   1009   VOC  857  and  VOC  316.  Cited  in  Viallé,  1992,  pp.   made after European shapes or motifs provided, as shown by the VOC documents
 these  stylized  flower  motifs  closely  resemble  the   10–11, and p. 14; respectively.
 ships with two masts and two tiers of sails, a Chinese coastline with houses and   flowers shown on Iznik pottery and Ottoman textiles   1010   VOC 863. Cited in Viallé, 1992, pp. 21–22.  discussed above, was both complex and lenghtly. Dutch merchants always depended
 mountains, and a giant leaping fish (probably referring to the dangers of open sea   of the second half of the sixteenth and first half of   1011   Discussed in Canepa, 2006, pp. 27–28, figs. 14–16,   on the Chinese junk traders to place an order, who first had to understand the specific
                           and pp. 138–143; and Canepa, 2010, pp. 63–64, figs.
 the seventeenth century, it is likely that the flower
 voyages)  (Fig. 3.4.2.2.8). In  the past, as  noted elsewhere, dishes of  this type were   motifs depicted on the porcelain were taken from   3 and 4. Also see, Ströber, 2013, pp. 144–145, no. 45.     requirements made by their new European customers, in order to communicate them
 printed sources or wall-tiles provided by the Dutch.   1012   Daniel Suebsman, ‘Porzellan au seiner Nor-
 attributed to the city of Lisbon because the Lisbon arms depict Portuguese ships sailing   For an Ottoman silk kemma border in the Sadberk   deutschen  Privatsammlung’,  in  Annete  to the porcelain potters and decorators of these important manufacturing centres of
 on calm or rough seas. No documentary evidence, however, was found to support this   Hanim Müzesi in Istanbul published alongside     Kanzenbach and Daniel Suebsman (eds.),  Made   export porcelain, which were not only located far from the port cities, but also from
                           in China. Porzellan und Teekultur im Nordwesten
 a  Kraak dish of this type, see Canepa, 2008/2,
 theory. 1011  The central scene, combining European and Chinese motifs, has been the   pp. 38–39, figs. 16 and 18.    im 18. Jahrhundent. Ein Kapitel Handels-  each other. Although this indirect trade in porcelain proved to be dissapointing at
 996   Tulip bulbs were sold at very high prices. In 1637,   geschichte, exhibition catalogue, Ostfriesisches
 subject of much discussion. It has been a common opinion among scholars that the   bulbs were sold faster than they could grow and   Landesmuseum, Emden, 2015, pp. 95–96, cat. 4.   times for the Dutch, as the special orders were sometimes not entirely fulfilled to their
 scene was inspired by a European nautical map, which in the early days of maritime   this resulted in speculation. Many pamphlets were   I am grateful to Daniel Suebman for granting me   expectations, we have a wide variety of surviving pieces that clearly reflect the Dutch
                           permission to include an image of the sea chart in
 published ridiculing the craziness of this speculative
 cartography usually illustrated coastlines with landmarks, islets, ships and  marine   trade. The Wageningen UR Library holds 32 of such   this doctoral dissertation.  desire to incorporate the imported porcelain with exotic decorations into their daily
 ‘Tulipmania’ pamphlets. For information and other   1013   For the transliteration of the characters, see Scott
 roses. This research study found an anonymous Dutch nautical map of Nova Zembla,   images from the nursery catalogue illustrated here,   and Kerr, 1994, p. 40, no. 86. These characters have   life not only in the Dutch Republic but also in the Dutch colonies in both Asia and
 published in 1598, depicting a closely related scene with a central marine rose, ships   see http://bit.ly/WDaurG. Accessed October 2014.   also been translated as ‘from far and near it’s a   the New World, but in shapes that suited their own culture.
                           pleasure that you come’ and  ‘Make happy those
 For a recent and comprehensive discussion on the
 with two masts and two tiers of sails, and a large fish, which suggested that the source   ‘Tulipmania’, see Anne Goldgar, Tulipmania: Money,   who are near and those who are far will come’.
 Honour, and Knowledge in the Dutch Golden Age,   See, Harrison-Hall, 2001, p. 323, no. 11:125; and
 of this scene may have been Dutch rather than Iberian (Fig. 3.4.2.2.9). Recent research   Chicago, 2007.  Suebsman, 2015, p. 95; respectively.
 by Suebsman has shown that the central scene and the cartouches repeated twice on   997   The Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen also   1014   For another example in the Idemitsu Museum of
 houses a set of tin-glazed earthenware wall-tiles
                           Arts in Tokyo, see Yuba Tadanori, Chinese Ceramics
 the border that appear to represent a European armorial flanked by two long-tailed   depicting  stylized  tulip  flowers  dating  to  c.1640,   in the Idemitsu Collection, Tokyo, 1987, cat. No.
 Acc. No. A 5030 (KN&V). Published in D. C. Mees,   879. One other in the Seikado Bunko Art Museum is
 parrots were most likely based on a sea chart of the coast of Portugal from a nautical   Kunstnijverheid en  tegels  1600–1800 –  Applied   published in Seikado Bunko Art Museum, Swatow
 atlas entitled Spieghel der Zeevaerdt, first published by the former Dutch Captain from   arts and tiles 1600–1800, Rotterdam, 1997, p. 307.   Wares from the Seikado Collection, Tokyo, 1997,
 Also see the set of wall-tiles decorated in blue and
                           p. 35, no. 27. Mentioned in Canepa, 2006, p. 141.
 Enkhuizen, Lucas Janszoon Waghenaer (1533/34–1606), in 1584 (Fig. 3.4.2.2.10). 1012   colours depicting single tulips and other flowers   1015   Mentioned in Sargent, 2012, p. 166, and p. 173,
 framed at either side by baluster borders and a   note 13.
 The find of this sea chart is of particular importance for this research study. This group   fluer-de-lis at each corner in the Victoria and Albert   1016   Ibid., p. 166; and Suebsman, 2015, p. 95.
 306   Silk, Porcelain and Lacquer    Trade in Chinese Porcelain                                                                 307
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