Vase base
De Grieksche A factory (fl.1658 - 1811)
Category
Ceramics
Date
circa 1690 - 1695
Materials
tin-glazed earthenware (faience), in-glaze cobalt blue and manganese black
Measurements
1008 mm (Height)
Order this imageCollection
Dyrham, Gloucestershire
NT 452205.3
Summary
A De Grieksche A (Greek A) factory tin-glazed earthenware (faience) seven-tiered flower pyramid, painted in cobalt blue and manganese black with garden scenes, made at the workshop of Adrianus Kocx, Delft, the Netherlands, c.1690-95. Vase part; vase base - rectangular base surmounted by seven separate sections, each with four animal head nozzles. The base has four lizard supporters for the super structure. Painted in blue with cupids and garden scenes on the base; grotesques colunms, urns, cupids, etc, on upper sections. Head of one lizard on base missing. Top of uppermost section damaged.
Full description
Aspiring courtiers used ceramics as evidence of their loyalty to William III and Mary II. As a result, many extravagant examples of bespoke Dutch faience are found in historic English houses. They are painted to resemble Chinese porcelain imported through Holland, and their shapes, often associated with cut flowers or growing plants, duplicate the inventive models furnishing royal interiors in England and the Netherlands. In November 1710, an inventory was prepared of the rich contents of Dyrham Park, Gloucestershire, a house acquired by the skilled and ambitious court administrator William Blathwayt (c.1649–1717) by his marriage in 1686 to Mary Wynter (1650–91), heiress to the estate. It lists over a dozen Delft flowerpots placed inside empty chimneypieces. ‘A large Pyramid Delf Flower Pot in ye Chimney’ was strategically placed in the red and white marble chimneypiece in the main entrance, the Cedar Vestibule, which was hung with gilt leather. In the ‘Best Bed Chamber above Stairs’, lined with ‘verdure’ tapestries and furnished with a crimson and yellow velvet bed and chairs, there was another Delft pyramid, also ‘in ye Chimney’, placed on the marble hearth-stone (‘foot-pace’) directly in front. Both Delft pyramids survive. Exquisitely painted in cobalt blue outlined with manganese black, they form a pair, as was usual, and were made at De Grieksche A factory between 1690 and 1695. Their square pedestals are supported on claw-and-ball feet surmounted with four salamanders supporting seven graduated trays. Each tray contained water for the flowers inserted through the tubular nozzles (in the form of a serpent’s open jaw). The pedestals have alternating scenes of Dutch formal gardens with parterres, perhaps the royal gardens at Het Loo, near Apeldoorn. In one, amorini arrange flowers in an urn, framed by classical architecture, and on the other, seen through an archway, they hold a flower-basket and garden pot. The pyramids, filled with a variety of brightly coloured flowers, a costly luxury changing with the seasons, enlivened dark baroque interiors. As they cannot be identified in a 1703 inventory of Dyrham, they may have been in Blathwayt’s house in Whitehall, London, or he may have acquired them later second-hand, since few were produced after Mary died in 1694. Blathwayt made major improvements to the fabric of Dyrham following his wife’s death in 1691. Fashionable goods from around the world were acquired on trips to The Hague and Amsterdam, drawing on the taste of William and Mary and their merchants. Even his magnificent garden was in the royal taste, with parterres, fountains and sculpture. A polylinguist, Blathwayt had become wealthy in his own right through lucrative posts as Surveyor and Auditor-General of Plantation Revenues (1680–88), supervising incomes from the colonies. Later, having bought the office of Secretary of War, he administered all aspects of the army and frequently travelled with the King. However, with William’s death, he was pushed out of office and into retirement. No invoices survive detailing his Delft purchases, one of the most important collections in Britain. Some may have been perquisites from William III, distributed following Mary’s death, or from Queen Anne, following William’s death. In the nineteenth century, the Delft was gathered together with other heirlooms in the Great Hall. Many of the flower vases were separated from their pedestals, as they were no longer used for their original purpose. Catalogue entry adapted from Patricia F. Ferguson, Ceramics: 400 Years of British Collecting in 100 Masterpieces, Philip Wilson Publishers, 2016.
Provenance
Indigenous collection purchased by Ministry of Works in 1956 and given to Dyrham Park in 1961
Marks and inscriptions
'AK' monogram in cobalt blue on top of one of the pedestals
Makers and roles
De Grieksche A factory (fl.1658 - 1811), factory Adrianus Kocx (fl.1686 - 1701), manufactory director
References
Ferguson 2016: Patricia F. Ferguson, Ceramics: 400 Years of British Collecting in 100 Masterpieces, Philip Wilson Publishers, 2016, pp.50-1 Archer 1975: Michael Archer. “Delft at Dyrham.” National Trust Year Book (1975-76) Jackson-Stops 1985: Gervase Jackson-Stops (ed.), The Treasure Houses of Britain: five hundred years of private patronage and art collecting, exh. cat. The National Gallery of Art, Washington, New Haven and London 1985, Cat. 104, pp.172-173 Ressing 2000: 'Delfts aardewerk in Dyrham Park', Vormen uit Vuur, 2000/4, no. 173, p. 10, ill. 3 Ray1988: Anthony Ray. “Dutch Delft at Dyrham.” Country Life 13 Oct. 1988, pp.236-238, pp. 236-238 Van Aken-Fehmers et al, 2008: Vases with Spouts: Three Centuries of Splendour (Dutch Delftware - History of a National Product)