1 / 4

Description

China. Kangxi period (1622-1722). Porcelain with white glaze and blue decor. On a flat, unglazed base, steep, spherically moulded wall with thickened lip rim. Each circumferentially decorated with a flat incised Qilong dragon between a dense peony blossom ground, with four rectangular reserves filled at the corners in deep cobalt blue with mountainous river landscapes with figures and the 1000 treasures, the shoulder and foot additionally surrounded by a wreath of heart- and pomegranate-shaped reserves filled with lotus branches, flowers growing out of rocks and a phoenix, also in cobalt blue. Height each 50cm, ø ca. 53cm. One basin restored. Glaze rubbed in places on both. Provenance: - Collection of Augustus the Strong, Johanneum Dresden. - Auction Rudolf Lepke's Kunst-Auctions-Haus Berlin, 12 October 1920, Dresden, catalogue nos. 788-789, ill. plate 39. - Inventory Kunsthandlung A.S. Drey, Munich, 1920. - Auction Paul Graupe Berlin, 17 and 18 June 1936, cat. No.356, illus. plate 68. - Porcelain collection of Ernst Georg Schneider (1900-1977). - On permanent loan to the Ernst Georg Schneider Foundation in Schloss Jägerhof, Düsseldorf and purchased by the City of Düsseldorf in 1987. - Restituted to the heirs of the former partners of the Kunsthaus A.S. Drey November 2023. Literature: - Auction catalogue Rudolph Lepke's Kunst-Auctions-Haus, Berlin: Porcelain, paintings, ivory sculptures, weapons from the Saxon State Collections - Johanneum, Grünes Gewölbe, Gemäldegalerie in Dresden. Auction in Dresden, Tuesday, 12 October 1920, p.46, cat. nos. 788, 789, plate 39. - Auction catalogue Paul Graupe, Berlin: Aus dem Besitz der Firma A.S. Drey München (Räumungsverkauf), 17 and 18 June 1936, p.60, cat. no. 356, plate 68. - Link to the catalogue entry for a comparable cache pot from the SKD collection in the Dresden Zwinger: https://royalporcelaincollection.skd.museum/unique/object/157845. The two large cachepots presented here are characterised not only by their impressive size and elaborate glazing technique, but above all by the history of their provenance. They were originally part of the porcelain collection of Augustus the Strong (1670-1733) in Dresden. The Saxon Elector had fallen victim to the so-called \"maladie de porcelaine\" very early on. Not only did he found the first European porcelain manufactory in 1710, but he also passionately collected porcelain objects of Chinese and Japanese origin, which served as an incentive and model for founding the manufactory. He is probably best known for the so-called dragon vases from the Kangxi period, which he received from Frederick William I of Prussia in 1717 along with other pieces in exchange for 600 horsemen from his army. The Chinese porcelains in the collection also found their way to his court via Dutch dealers, for example, and were exhibited in the Japanese Palace, which was specially remodelled as a \"porcelain palace\", together with the products of his own porcelain manufactory. The two large cachepots - as well as the other pieces still in the Dresden porcelain collection today - were probably planted with small trees, more precisely orange trees, during the reign of Augustus the Strong, as the inventory mentions. Today's presentation of the collection shows them, now of course unplanted, impressively staged in the East Asia Gallery of the Zwinger. In October 1920, the two cachepots presented here were then offered for sale at an auction in favour of the Sächsischer Kunstverein in Dresden, together with other exceptional works from the former royal and now state collection. They were listed as \"Two large flower pots\" under lot numbers 788 and 789 (see also the historical photograph from the auction catalogue at the time). It was the second auction of this kind to generate funds for new acquisitions. \"For the most part, they belong to the old holdings that King Augustus the Strong, who loved splendour and art, and his no less art-loving successor King Augustus III of Poland brought together in the 18th century and which became the basis of Dresden's world-famous collections\" (Lepke 1920, foreword). Duplicate pieces from the collection were selected and, in addition to the cache-pots on offer here, not only a few other cache-pots but also vase sets, monumental lidded vases and figurines from the field of Chinese porcelain were offered. From 1920 onwards, the two cache pots presented here were part of the inventory of the art dealership A.S. Drey, founded by Aron Schmay Drey in Munich in 1866. The company was still family-owned at the beginning of the 1930s and under the Nazi regime its descendants were persecuted and the art dealership was forced to close. As a further reprisal, high back taxes and fines were demanded as part of this persecution. To settle these claims, the owners were forced to sell the art dealership's inventory in a clearance sale at auction. On 17 and 18 June 1936, in addition to numerous other

632 
Go to lot
<
>

China. Kangxi period (1622-1722). Porcelain with white glaze and blue decor. On a flat, unglazed base, steep, spherically moulded wall with thickened lip rim. Each circumferentially decorated with a flat incised Qilong dragon between a dense peony blossom ground, with four rectangular reserves filled at the corners in deep cobalt blue with mountainous river landscapes with figures and the 1000 treasures, the shoulder and foot additionally surrounded by a wreath of heart- and pomegranate-shaped reserves filled with lotus branches, flowers growing out of rocks and a phoenix, also in cobalt blue. Height each 50cm, ø ca. 53cm. One basin restored. Glaze rubbed in places on both. Provenance: - Collection of Augustus the Strong, Johanneum Dresden. - Auction Rudolf Lepke's Kunst-Auctions-Haus Berlin, 12 October 1920, Dresden, catalogue nos. 788-789, ill. plate 39. - Inventory Kunsthandlung A.S. Drey, Munich, 1920. - Auction Paul Graupe Berlin, 17 and 18 June 1936, cat. No.356, illus. plate 68. - Porcelain collection of Ernst Georg Schneider (1900-1977). - On permanent loan to the Ernst Georg Schneider Foundation in Schloss Jägerhof, Düsseldorf and purchased by the City of Düsseldorf in 1987. - Restituted to the heirs of the former partners of the Kunsthaus A.S. Drey November 2023. Literature: - Auction catalogue Rudolph Lepke's Kunst-Auctions-Haus, Berlin: Porcelain, paintings, ivory sculptures, weapons from the Saxon State Collections - Johanneum, Grünes Gewölbe, Gemäldegalerie in Dresden. Auction in Dresden, Tuesday, 12 October 1920, p.46, cat. nos. 788, 789, plate 39. - Auction catalogue Paul Graupe, Berlin: Aus dem Besitz der Firma A.S. Drey München (Räumungsverkauf), 17 and 18 June 1936, p.60, cat. no. 356, plate 68. - Link to the catalogue entry for a comparable cache pot from the SKD collection in the Dresden Zwinger: https://royalporcelaincollection.skd.museum/unique/object/157845. The two large cachepots presented here are characterised not only by their impressive size and elaborate glazing technique, but above all by the history of their provenance. They were originally part of the porcelain collection of Augustus the Strong (1670-1733) in Dresden. The Saxon Elector had fallen victim to the so-called \"maladie de porcelaine\" very early on. Not only did he found the first European porcelain manufactory in 1710, but he also passionately collected porcelain objects of Chinese and Japanese origin, which served as an incentive and model for founding the manufactory. He is probably best known for the so-called dragon vases from the Kangxi period, which he received from Frederick William I of Prussia in 1717 along with other pieces in exchange for 600 horsemen from his army. The Chinese porcelains in the collection also found their way to his court via Dutch dealers, for example, and were exhibited in the Japanese Palace, which was specially remodelled as a \"porcelain palace\", together with the products of his own porcelain manufactory. The two large cachepots - as well as the other pieces still in the Dresden porcelain collection today - were probably planted with small trees, more precisely orange trees, during the reign of Augustus the Strong, as the inventory mentions. Today's presentation of the collection shows them, now of course unplanted, impressively staged in the East Asia Gallery of the Zwinger. In October 1920, the two cachepots presented here were then offered for sale at an auction in favour of the Sächsischer Kunstverein in Dresden, together with other exceptional works from the former royal and now state collection. They were listed as \"Two large flower pots\" under lot numbers 788 and 789 (see also the historical photograph from the auction catalogue at the time). It was the second auction of this kind to generate funds for new acquisitions. \"For the most part, they belong to the old holdings that King Augustus the Strong, who loved splendour and art, and his no less art-loving successor King Augustus III of Poland brought together in the 18th century and which became the basis of Dresden's world-famous collections\" (Lepke 1920, foreword). Duplicate pieces from the collection were selected and, in addition to the cache-pots on offer here, not only a few other cache-pots but also vase sets, monumental lidded vases and figurines from the field of Chinese porcelain were offered. From 1920 onwards, the two cache pots presented here were part of the inventory of the art dealership A.S. Drey, founded by Aron Schmay Drey in Munich in 1866. The company was still family-owned at the beginning of the 1930s and under the Nazi regime its descendants were persecuted and the art dealership was forced to close. As a further reprisal, high back taxes and fines were demanded as part of this persecution. To settle these claims, the owners were forced to sell the art dealership's inventory in a clearance sale at auction. On 17 and 18 June 1936, in addition to numerous other

Estimate 30 000 - 40 000 EUR

* Not including buyer’s premium.
Please read the conditions of sale for more information.

Sale fees: 35 %
Leave bid
Register

For sale on Thursday 16 May : 14:00 (CEST)
cologne, Germany
Van Ham
+492219258620
Browse the catalogue Sales terms Sale info

Delivery to
Change delivery address
Delivery is not mandatory.
You may use the carrier of your choice.
The indicated price does not include the price of the lot or the auction house's fees.