Set of three plates; Company of the Indies, 18th century. Ceramics. They have slight wear.
Set of three plates of the Compania de Indias, 18th century.
Ceramic.
Slight wear and tear.
Measurements: 2.5 x 23 cm (x3).
Set comprising three plates of the same size and design. Decorated with vegetal motifs, the centre dominated by a floral arrangement and the eaves of each of them with three floral garlands. The East India Company was a generic term for companies that managed trade between a European metropolis and its colonies. Chinese manufacturers soon realised that Europeans were not connoisseurs of porcelain, and produced export porcelain that was vulgar, even flawed, but which in the eyes of Westerners turned out to be true works of art. Once the trade was regularly organised, the India Companies supplied Chinese artists with European models, both for forms and decoration. Throughout the 18th century the blue-and-white series persisted, but of inferior quality, which was then called Nanjing porcelain.
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Set of three plates of the Compania de Indias, 18th century.
Ceramic.
Slight wear and tear.
Measurements: 2.5 x 23 cm (x3).
Set comprising three plates of the same size and design. Decorated with vegetal motifs, the centre dominated by a floral arrangement and the eaves of each of them with three floral garlands. The East India Company was a generic term for companies that managed trade between a European metropolis and its colonies. Chinese manufacturers soon realised that Europeans were not connoisseurs of porcelain, and produced export porcelain that was vulgar, even flawed, but which in the eyes of Westerners turned out to be true works of art. Once the trade was regularly organised, the India Companies supplied Chinese artists with European models, both for forms and decoration. Throughout the 18th century the blue-and-white series persisted, but of inferior quality, which was then called Nanjing porcelain.