Price

£24000.00

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A Chelsea Tureen, Cover and Stand.

Circa 1753 – 1754.

The oval silver-shaped tureen and stand with ‘damask’d’ or ‘Gotzkowsky’ floral moulding, painted with flowers, butterflies and insects surmounted by a recumbent stag finial. The inside painted with dead game including a pheasant, hare, partridge and mallard.

The floral moulding and stag finial are taken directly from Meissen, the form of the tureen is adapted.

Surprisingly few tureens survive from early Chelsea dinner services, perhaps it was considered more practical to make them of silver.

Patricia Ferguson has published the three known tureens in different sizes described as ‘in the wrought pattern with Landskips’ all surmounted by finial of a boy huntsman with a dog, and cites the only recorded example matching ours in the Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, Alabama.

A pair of very similar stands from a private collection are illustrated in Chelsea Porcelain, Elizabeth Adams, 2001, fig 8.1

Provenance – From the collection of the descendants of the Marechal de Perignon, France.

Literature – Eighteenth-Century English Ceramics from the Catherine H. Collins Collection, (Birmingham, Alabama: Birmingham Museum of Art, 2004), Cat. No. 70.

Patricia Ferguson, The Earls of Enniskillen at Florence Court, a 1754 Chelsea auction in Dublin and the Irish Market, and the so-called ‘Warren Hastings’ pattern, English Ceramic Circle Transactions, vol.24, 2013, pp. 1 to30.

Dimensions

Stand: 39.8cm wide, Tureen: 29.2cm high, 34.9 cm wide

Price

£24000.00



Condition report

The antlers and one ear of the stag finial restored. The stand broken and restuck.
Open Monday-Friday 10-5.30, other times by appointment

The BADA Standard

  • Since 1918, BADA has been the leading association for the antiques and fine art trade
  • Members are elected for their knowledge, integrity and quality of stock
  • Our clients are protected by BADA’s code of conduct
  • Our dealers’ membership is reviewed and renewed annually
  • Bada.org is a non-profit site: clients deal directly with members and they pay no hidden fees
Click here for more information on the BADA Standard