PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATES OF BERNARD AND HELGA KRAMARSKY
A BÖTTGER POLISHED STONEWARE RECTANGULAR TEA CADDY
CIRCA 1710
Important information about this lot
Price Realised USD 16,380
Estimate
USD 12,000 - USD 18,000
Estimates do not reflect the final hammer price and do not include buyer's premium, any applicable taxes or artist's resale right. Please see the Conditions of Sale for full details.
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A BÖTTGER POLISHED STONEWARE RECTANGULAR TEA CADDY
This tea caddy is part of a small group of extremely rare Jaspisporzellan which was designed to simulate stones such as marble, porphyry or slate, an effect achieved by using variegated clays. Maria Santangelo notes that the late collector Malcolm Gutter had identified fifteen vessels with such marbled bodies. For a ‘Jaspisporzellan’ tankard from the Gutter Collection, see M. Santangelo, A Princely Pursuit, The Malcolm D. Gutter Collection of Early Meissen Porcelain, San Francisco, 2018, pp. 48-49, no. 10.
This rare form was also found in the 1779 inventory of the Japanese Palace in Dresden, built by Augustus the Strong to house his extensive collection of porcelain wares. The inventory notes "Six four-cornered boxes...five of the same, smooth, four-cornered, without cover, 41⁄2 inches high, 3⁄4 inch long, and 2 inches wide" (U. Pietsch, 61, as below). Though these examples had apertures in the center, they too were already missing their delicate lids. For a tea caddy of the same form with a cover, see Otto Walcha, Meißner Porzellan, Dresden, 1973, no. 5. For an un-polished example, see Ulrich Pietsch, Early Meissen Porcelain: The Wark Collection from the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, London, 2011, p. 61, and for a polished example cut with scattered flowers, see Klaus Pechstein and Norbert Götz (Eds.), Böttgersteinzeug und frühes Meißener Porzellan, Nuremberg, 1982, p. 53, no. 35.
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Condition report
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The condition of lots can vary widely and the nature of the lots sold means that they are unlikely to be in a perfect condition. Lots are sold in the condition they are in at the time of sale.
One large flat chip to the base, mainly to the underside and difficult to see when resting, approx. 5/8 in. wide; one small flat chip to the upper edge; one tiny chip to the lip of the aperture opening and a larger chip to the interior flange; a tiny pit to the top; some minor surface wear and scratches, mainly to the underside of the base where it rests.
313⁄16 in. (9.7 cm.) high, 31⁄16 in. (7.3 cm.) wide, 13⁄4 in. (4.4 cm.) deep 3/4 in. (2.3 cm.) wide, 7/8 in. (1.9 cm.) deep, the aperture