- 335
AN UNUSUAL PAIR OF PARCEL-GILT SILVER FILIGREE AND GEM-SET TOILET BOXES AND COVERS, UNMARKED, PROBABLY SUMATRA, FOR THE EUROPEAN MARKET, PROBABLY LATE 17TH CENTURY |
估價
10,000 - 20,000 GBP
招標截止
描述
- 11cm., 4 1/4 in.. wide
The eight lobed-form cover fitted with shaped pierced baroque foliate sleeve centered by faceted rock crystal finials, similar body overlaid with filigree leafy shapes, each lobe centered by a colored stone including garnets, amethysts, glass and pastes, on compressed circular filigree supports
出版
Associated literature:
Sotheby's, London, Treasures, 4 July 2018, lot 11 Jet Pijzel-Dommisse, 'Filigree in The Hague in the 17th Century', From Exhibition Catalogue, Silver Wonders From The East - Filigree of The Tsars, Hermitage Amsterdam, 27 April-17 September 2006, p.89
Sotheby's, London, Treasures, 4 July 2018, lot 11 Jet Pijzel-Dommisse, 'Filigree in The Hague in the 17th Century', From Exhibition Catalogue, Silver Wonders From The East - Filigree of The Tsars, Hermitage Amsterdam, 27 April-17 September 2006, p.89
拍品資料及來源
These toilet boxes combine Chinese influenced forms in the filigree with European features such as the baroque foliage and South German style application of coloured stones. There appears to be no consensus for the origin of this type of filigree with commentators suggesting China, India as well as somewhere in between. Filigree was sort after in the 17th century and references to it can be found in contemporary inventories, such as 12 filigree mounted coconut cups still existing in the Deutchen Ordens in Vienna brought to that city, most probably by Margaret-Therèse (1651-1673) of Spain and Portugal as part of her dowry when she married Leopold I in 1666; but these contemporary inventories are often unhelpful as to the place of origin, with the same filigree object being Chinese at one time and Indian at another. '..Chinese and Indian work can (sometimes) mean the technique of filigree and in the field of precious metal it was not always easy for the 17th century inventory compiler to see the difference between Chinese and Indian’1. Anyway it might have been that one place specialised in this intricate form of work, confusing the issue of origin by adapting what was produced to meet the stylistic preferences of a wide geographic area.
This was suggested by an 18th century commentator. A now much quoted description by the English Orientalist and Secretary of the British Admiralty, William Marsden F.R.S. (1734-1836) in his History of Sumatra in 1784 puts the importance of that large island into perspective. ‘There is no manufacture in that part of the world; and perhaps I might be justified in saying, in any part of the world, that has been more admired and celebrated than the fine gold and silver filigree of Sumatra.
Marsden also described Sumatra as the `… Emporium of eastern riches, wither the traders of the west resorted with their cargoes to exchange them for the precious merchandise of the Indian archipelago’. Inventories of the time made locally in South East Asia, are clearer about the origin of the filigree, than their European counterparts, here expressions such as ‘Manila Work’ or ‘Batavian work’ are sometimes found, but the most common description is ‘West Coast filigree’, or simply ‘West Coast Work’, referring to the West Coast of Sumatra where Padang was the most significant centre of production.
A box in the Rijksmuseum, which can be compared with the pair now offered in the way the filigree is made and the motifs used, is datable to at least the early part of the 18th century It may well have been made in Sumatra, as the owner Petronella van Hoorn was daughter and granddaughter of successive governor generals of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and lived on the island of Java, divided from Sumatra by only a relatively narrow stretch of water.
This was suggested by an 18th century commentator. A now much quoted description by the English Orientalist and Secretary of the British Admiralty, William Marsden F.R.S. (1734-1836) in his History of Sumatra in 1784 puts the importance of that large island into perspective. ‘There is no manufacture in that part of the world; and perhaps I might be justified in saying, in any part of the world, that has been more admired and celebrated than the fine gold and silver filigree of Sumatra.
Marsden also described Sumatra as the `… Emporium of eastern riches, wither the traders of the west resorted with their cargoes to exchange them for the precious merchandise of the Indian archipelago’. Inventories of the time made locally in South East Asia, are clearer about the origin of the filigree, than their European counterparts, here expressions such as ‘Manila Work’ or ‘Batavian work’ are sometimes found, but the most common description is ‘West Coast filigree’, or simply ‘West Coast Work’, referring to the West Coast of Sumatra where Padang was the most significant centre of production.
A box in the Rijksmuseum, which can be compared with the pair now offered in the way the filigree is made and the motifs used, is datable to at least the early part of the 18th century It may well have been made in Sumatra, as the owner Petronella van Hoorn was daughter and granddaughter of successive governor generals of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and lived on the island of Java, divided from Sumatra by only a relatively narrow stretch of water.