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1221
1470026

Trembleuser, ett par, kompaniporslin. Qingdynastin, 1700-tal.

Utropspris
25 000 - 30 000 SEK
2 210 - 2 650 EUR
2 280 - 2 730 USD
Klubbat pris
Återrop
Köpinformation
För konditionsrapport kontakta specialist
Cecilia Nordström
Stockholm
Cecilia Nordström
Ansvarig specialist asiatisk keramik och konsthantverk, äldre europeisk keramik samt glas
+46 (0)739 40 08 02
Trembleuser, ett par, kompaniporslin. Qingdynastin, 1700-tal.

Snäckformade med genonbruten löstagbar kopphållare. Dekor i famille rosefärger. Längd 22 cm.

Glasyrnagg. Slitage.

Införselmoms

Införselmoms (12%) tillkommer på klubbat pris. För ytterligare information vänligen kontakta kundservice, alternativt +46 8-614 08 00.

Proveniens

From the Collection of Tove and Karl Emil Strømstad (born 1936), Norway. The couple built their collection over the decades. They started to collect in the early 1970's after buying the first piece, a famille rose bowl, dating from the 18th Century. Mr Strømstads work at IBM brought the couple and their family to various places around the world and they built their vast academic collection of ceramics dating from the Han dynasty to the Qing dynasty by visiting auction houses, antique dealers and antique fairs. Always striving to acquire pieces form different epoques and constantly seeking more knowledge about the pieces, the techniques and their history.

Strømstad label 537. And with old collectors label to the base.

Utställningar

For other items from this collection, se Sothebys, Asian Arts / 5000 Years. 18 April 2023. Paris. Lot no 1-39.

Litteratur

After a silvered model, probably made for the Spanish market. A mancerina/trembleuse is special piece for the chocolate service. It was invented by a Spanish grandee, in Mexico, in the seventeenth century and was named after the man who had invented it, Pedro de Toledo, 1st Marquis of Mancera, who served as Viceroy of Peru from 1639 to 1648. Known in France as “tasse trembleuse” and “Chocolate stand” in England, some were ordered from China but remain more easy to find in Southern Europe.