Jar
Category
Ceramics
Date
c. 1700
Materials
Porcelain, cobalt, enamel.
Place of origin
Jingdezhen
Order this imageCollection
Saltram, Devon
NT 870869
Summary
Pair of jars, porcelain, cylindrical, with short rims and domed lids with bud-shaped finials, made in Jingdezhen, Jiangxi Province, China, Kangxi period (1662–1722), c. 1700, decorated in underglaze blue with alternating panels depicting female figures and jardinieres with flowering plants on stands, with more floral decoration around the shoulders and on the lids, with additional enamel decoration in green and red added in Europe, possibly in London, early 19th century.
Full description
The practice of adding enamels to blue and white Chinese porcelain was known in Britain as ‘clobbering’ and was particularly popular in the early 19th century, when there was a glut of blue and white porcelain and the ‘Regency’ taste of the period favoured bright colours (Espir 2018).
Provenance
Given to the National Trust by Montagu Brownlow Parker, 5th Earl of Morley (1878-1962), 1957
References
Espir 2018: Helen Espir, ‘The Atrocious Unsworth – Chinese Blue and White Porcelain Clobbered in London in the 19th Century’, English Ceramics Circle Transations, vol. 29 (2018),, pp. 199-216