37/2008-1
Collection
Ceramics
Brief description
Porcelain saucer with cobalt blue underglaze decoration of three figures and a pavilion, probably made in Jingdezhen, China, during the Yongzheng period (1723-1735) and recovered from the Ca Mau Wreck in 1998.
Object name
saucer
Object number
37/2008-1
Location
On Display
Production date
c.1725 (manufactured)
Production place
Jingdezhen (manufactured)
Period
Georgian (1714-1837)
Material
porcelain
paint
glaze
paint
glaze
Technique
thrown
hand painted
glazed
hand painted
glazed
Physical description
Blue and white porcelain saucer, wheel thrown and painted in underglaze cobalt blue. It is decorated with a scene in a garden setting depicting the corner of a pavilion and three figures, with the rails of a fence or bridge in the foreground. In the centre of the composition is a man dressed in military attire walking with a woman, and a man wearing scholarly official robes emerging from behind the pavilion. The decorative band around the rim consists of a diaper pattern interspersed with single flowers. There is no decoration on the reverse. The original shiny, glassy finish of the porcelain has been altered by the cleaning process after the porcelain was recovered from the shipwreck, so the porcelain has a smooth, matt appearance.
The saucer is marked 'cm4:16.127', and the underside of the saucer was physically marked with its object number on 10/05/2010.
The saucer is marked 'cm4:16.127', and the underside of the saucer was physically marked with its object number on 10/05/2010.
Content description
The well of the saucer is decorated with a scene showing three figures near a pavilion; a man in military dress and a woman walking together away from the corner of the pavilion and another male scholarly official figure, peering around the corner of the building. There is a post and decorative railing in the foreground and a large pot, possibly containing a flag, adjacent to the walking couple.
Dimensions
Height: 2.2cm
Diameter: 11.5cm
Diameter: 11.5cm
Website keywords
serving drink
tea, coffee and chocolate drinking
tea, coffee and chocolate drinking
Label
Label text for the exhibition At Home with the World, Geffrye Museum (20 March 2012- 9 September 2012). This saucer was displayed alongside a teabowl and a teapot:
Teapot, tea bowl and saucer
Porcelain
Probably made in Jingdezhen, China
About 1725
This teapot, tea bowl and saucer were packed into the hold of a ship in Canton (Guangzhou), China in about 1725 as part of a cargo of over 100,000 pieces of porcelain destined for Europe. The ship sank on her way to the trading port Batavia (Jakarta) in Indonesia, and the fragile teawares would wait 300 years at the bottom of the sea before being discovered by fishermen and salvaged.
Teapot, tea bowl and saucer
Porcelain
Probably made in Jingdezhen, China
About 1725
This teapot, tea bowl and saucer were packed into the hold of a ship in Canton (Guangzhou), China in about 1725 as part of a cargo of over 100,000 pieces of porcelain destined for Europe. The ship sank on her way to the trading port Batavia (Jakarta) in Indonesia, and the fragile teawares would wait 300 years at the bottom of the sea before being discovered by fishermen and salvaged.