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A Chinese export silver box with cover and tray by an unidentified maker, early 20th Century.

Estimate
2 000 - 4 000 SEK
179 - 358 EUR
183 - 366 USD
Hammer price
18 000 SEK
Purchasing info
A Chinese export silver box with cover and tray by an unidentified maker, early 20th Century.

Box and tray with the imitation of a bamboo stalk decorated with cherry blossom, handles imitating cherry blossom twigs. The tray with engraved cherry blossom. Weight 401 g. Height of box with cover 8,8 cm, length of tray incl handles 16,1 cm.

Minor dents to tray.

Provenance

The Erik Nordström Collection.

More information

The Collection of Erik Nordström (1884-1971)
Erik Nordström was commissioned after a recommendation by Swedish minister Gustav Oscar Wallenberg, the Envoyé of Japan and China, as Post General in Shanghai at the Royal Chinese General Post Office in 1910. The aim was to help facilitate its work throughout China. He was positioned in several of the Chinese provinces (he often chose the northern provinces due to their resemblance to the northern Sweden where he stems from) over his 35 years in the postal service.
Gustav Oscar Wallenberg who became a close and dear friend of Erik Nordström, was a keen collector of Chinese ceramics and introduced him to the art of collecting by defining age, quality and heritage as they visited the antique shops of Beijing. The vast collection of Eric Nordström contains a variety of objects of which many were acquired for the purpose of everyday use, hence the wear to many of the objects.
During his time in China he encountered and befriended many of the Swedish society who both worked and lived as well as passed through China at the time, i.e. Johan Gunnar Andersson and wife, Sven Hedin, Carl Bonde, Sten Thiel in the company of Nils von Dardel and his then fiancé Nita Wallenberg, to name only a few.
Erik Nordström was a keen sportsman and always liked a challenge whether it be hunting, shooting or tennis. He retired in China in 1945 and spent his last years in Qingdao before his return to Sweden in 1948.
By the time he left China in 1948 he and his family had experienced the Chinese revolution, World War I and the Japanese invasion and World War II.