A Meissen 'Earl of Jersey service'-type dish, Circa 1735-40 painted with a Chinoiserie figure astride his galloping steed followed a running boy holding a fan in each hand in river landscape with sailing junks on the distant horizon and a gilt sun in the sky above, the shaped brown-edged rim scattered with sprigs and flowerheads, crossed swords mark in underglaze-blue, Dreher's mark of two dots for Johann Martin Kittel Junior, the interior edge of the footrim incised with Dreher's mark //.Diameter: 11⅞ in.30.2 cmCondition reportFor further information please contact oppenheimer@sothebys.com; +1 212 894 1442.ProvenanceMiss H. Argyropoulo Collection, her sale, Christie's London, May 12, 1927, lots 35-36, acquired at the sale by [Hermann] Ball for a total of £155 7s;With Hermann Ball, Berlin;Margarethe (née Knapp, 1878-1949) and Dr. Franz (1871-1950) Oppenheimer, Berlin & Vienna, bearing label (no. 237 in red);Dr. Fritz Mannheimer (1890-1939), Amsterdam & Paris, inv. no. Por. 253 a/b (acquired between 1936 and 1939);Dienststelle Mühlmann, The Hague (acquired from the Estate of the above in 1941 on behalf of the Sonderauftrag Linz for the proposed Führermuseum);On deposit at Kloster Stift Hohenfurth;On deposit at Salzbergwerk Bad Aussee;Recovered from the above by Allied Monuments Officers and transferred to the Central Collecting Point Munich (MCCP inv. no. 1596/1);Repatriated from the above to Holland between 1945 and 1949;Loaned by the Dutch State to the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam in 1952 and transferred to the museum in 1960;Restituted by the above to the heirs of Margarethe and Franz Oppenheimer in 2021LiteratureFranz Kieslinger, Verzeichnis der Restbestände der Sammlung Mannheimer, [S.I.], 1941, p. 23, cat. no. 159Ralph H. Wark, 'Adam Friedrich von Löwenfinck einer der bedeutendsten deutschen Porzellan- und Fayencemaler des 18. Jahrhunderts 1714-1754', Mitteilungsblatt Keramik-Freunde der Schweiz, No. 34, 1956, p. 18Abraham L. den Blaauwen, Meissen porcelain in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, 2000, p. 280, cat. no. 203Claudia Bodinek, Raffinesse im Akkord, Meissener Porzellanmalerei und Ihre Grafischen Vorlagen, Band II, Dresden, 2018, p. 370, pl. 285aCatalogue notePlates of this distinctive type have traditionally been associated with the Villiars family, the Earls of Jersey. In 1860 Sarah Sophie, Countess of Jersey, made an inventory of her London residence in Berkeley Square in which she recorded "Old China- 33 Dresden plates Chinese figures", den Blaauwen, 2000, p. 279, cat. no. 202. In 1948 the renowned collector Ralph H. Wark purchased a group of similarly decorated Meissen wares, which was said to once have been in the collection of the Earls of Jersey. The group is now in the collection of The Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, Jacksonville, Florida, and is illustrated in Pietsch, 2011, pp. 214-25, cat nos. 200-212. In 1949, the 9th Earl gave twenty-one plates to the National Trust which remain at Osterley Park House, Greater London. Wark considered the painting to be by Adam Friedrich von Löwenfinck However, some pieces painted in this manner have impressed numerals and are therefore dateable to after Löwenfinck's departure in 1736, indicating that other artists at Meissen worked in this style, and that there may perhaps have been more than one service of this type. The figures of a horseman and running boy are inspired by engravings by Petrus Schenk the Younger's series Nieuwe geinventeerde Sineesen, plates 7 and 23, the former illustrated in Bodinek, op. cit., p. 370, pl. 285. Two dishes of this large size were in the collection of Otto and Magdalena Blohm, New York, sold, Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, April 25, 1961, lots 426-427, the latter illustrated in Robert Schmidt Early European Porcelain as collected by Otto Blohm, 1953, no. 24, pl. 8.
A Meissen 'Earl of Jersey service'-type dish, Circa 1735-40 painted with a Chinoiserie figure astride his galloping steed followed a running boy holding a fan in each hand in river landscape with sailing junks on the distant horizon and a gilt sun in the sky above, the shaped brown-edged rim scattered with sprigs and flowerheads, crossed swords mark in underglaze-blue, Dreher's mark of two dots for Johann Martin Kittel Junior, the interior edge of the footrim incised with Dreher's mark //.Diameter: 11⅞ in.30.2 cmCondition reportFor further information please contact oppenheimer@sothebys.com; +1 212 894 1442.ProvenanceMiss H. Argyropoulo Collection, her sale, Christie's London, May 12, 1927, lots 35-36, acquired at the sale by [Hermann] Ball for a total of £155 7s;With Hermann Ball, Berlin;Margarethe (née Knapp, 1878-1949) and Dr. Franz (1871-1950) Oppenheimer, Berlin & Vienna, bearing label (no. 237 in red);Dr. Fritz Mannheimer (1890-1939), Amsterdam & Paris, inv. no. Por. 253 a/b (acquired between 1936 and 1939);Dienststelle Mühlmann, The Hague (acquired from the Estate of the above in 1941 on behalf of the Sonderauftrag Linz for the proposed Führermuseum);On deposit at Kloster Stift Hohenfurth;On deposit at Salzbergwerk Bad Aussee;Recovered from the above by Allied Monuments Officers and transferred to the Central Collecting Point Munich (MCCP inv. no. 1596/1);Repatriated from the above to Holland between 1945 and 1949;Loaned by the Dutch State to the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam in 1952 and transferred to the museum in 1960;Restituted by the above to the heirs of Margarethe and Franz Oppenheimer in 2021LiteratureFranz Kieslinger, Verzeichnis der Restbestände der Sammlung Mannheimer, [S.I.], 1941, p. 23, cat. no. 159Ralph H. Wark, 'Adam Friedrich von Löwenfinck einer der bedeutendsten deutschen Porzellan- und Fayencemaler des 18. Jahrhunderts 1714-1754', Mitteilungsblatt Keramik-Freunde der Schweiz, No. 34, 1956, p. 18Abraham L. den Blaauwen, Meissen porcelain in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, 2000, p. 280, cat. no. 203Claudia Bodinek, Raffinesse im Akkord, Meissener Porzellanmalerei und Ihre Grafischen Vorlagen, Band II, Dresden, 2018, p. 370, pl. 285aCatalogue notePlates of this distinctive type have traditionally been associated with the Villiars family, the Earls of Jersey. In 1860 Sarah Sophie, Countess of Jersey, made an inventory of her London residence in Berkeley Square in which she recorded "Old China- 33 Dresden plates Chinese figures", den Blaauwen, 2000, p. 279, cat. no. 202. In 1948 the renowned collector Ralph H. Wark purchased a group of similarly decorated Meissen wares, which was said to once have been in the collection of the Earls of Jersey. The group is now in the collection of The Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, Jacksonville, Florida, and is illustrated in Pietsch, 2011, pp. 214-25, cat nos. 200-212. In 1949, the 9th Earl gave twenty-one plates to the National Trust which remain at Osterley Park House, Greater London. Wark considered the painting to be by Adam Friedrich von Löwenfinck However, some pieces painted in this manner have impressed numerals and are therefore dateable to after Löwenfinck's departure in 1736, indicating that other artists at Meissen worked in this style, and that there may perhaps have been more than one service of this type. The figures of a horseman and running boy are inspired by engravings by Petrus Schenk the Younger's series Nieuwe geinventeerde Sineesen, plates 7 and 23, the former illustrated in Bodinek, op. cit., p. 370, pl. 285. Two dishes of this large size were in the collection of Otto and Magdalena Blohm, New York, sold, Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, April 25, 1961, lots 426-427, the latter illustrated in Robert Schmidt Early European Porcelain as collected by Otto Blohm, 1953, no. 24, pl. 8.
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