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Dutch Market Plate Decorated with a Foreign Couple Walking in a Garden - Image 1
Dutch Market Plate Decorated with a Foreign Couple Walking in a Garden - Image 2
Public Domain

Jingdezhen kilns

Dutch Market Plate Decorated with a Foreign Couple Walking in a Garden

1719-1729

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Jingdezhen kilns

Dutch Market Plate Decorated with a Foreign Couple Walking in a Garden

1719-1729

Physical Qualities Porcelain with underglaze cobalt and overglaze enamel and gold decoration, Each: 9 1/4 in. diam. (23.5 cm.)
Credit Line Dorothy McIlvain Scott Collection
Object Number 2012.399.4
In the 1500s and 1600s, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean porcelain was coveted by maritime merchants who transported examples to European courts, where porcelain conveyed global knowledge and status. Only Asian workshops knew the recipe for porcelain prior the 18th century. To own works of “true porcelain,” Europeans ordered objects and dinner services, adorned with coats of arms or depictions of Europeans, that had been decorated by women and men in Asian studios. However, even after Europeans deciphered the formula in the early 1700s, porcelain from Asia was an essential possession for aristocrats who, by this time, were reaping the wealth of global conquest. B. Luberda, Recasting Colonialism: Michelle Erickson Ceramics Exhibition, May 7 - Oct. 2023
The Baltimore Museum of Art by bequest, 2012; Dorothy McIlvain Scott, Baltimore
Brittany Luberda, "Recasting Colonialism: Michelle Erickson Ceramics," Baltimore Museum of Art, May 7-October 1, 2023
Council Tour & Reception, BMA Today, Issue 171, Summer 2023, p. 26

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