Imari decorated porcelain covered goblet with... Lot 43
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Imari decorated porcelain covered goblet with silver saucer and "trembleuse" mount.
The porcelain: Japan, Arita region, circa 1710.
The mount of the goblet :
Paris, 1717-1722.
The mounting of the saucer:
Master goldsmith: Paul Leriche, received in 1686.
Paris 1726-1732.
The goblet is slightly conical, with a domed lid and a saucer decorated with flowers
flowers and polychrome branches. The goblet is placed in a silver frame composed of two circles
of two circles supported by four amounts composed of openwork scrolls. The upper part
decorated with a band of silver chased scrolls and flowers on a background amati. The
lid is provided with a central silver mounting chased with the same ornaments as the band of the
of the body.
Height : 13 cm - Diameter of the saucer : 15,4 cm
Gross weight : 428 g.
Rare silver mounting of very beautiful manufacture with punches of discharge Parisian. The porcelain
Imari porcelain comes from the Arita region. This goblet with a lid was made for the European market
before receiving a Parisian setting, a specialty of some Parisian silversmiths at the turn of the
17th and 18th centuries.
See : Stéphane Castelluccio, Le goût pour les porcelaines de Chine et du Japon à Paris aux XVIIe-
XVIIIe siècles, 2013 (in particular p. 31 fig.12).
Son of a silversmith, Paul Leriche was born in 1659 in Paris. He was received as a master in 1686. He is known for his
Chinese and Japanese porcelain mounts, in silver or vermeil, especially from the years
1717-1726. Among his remarkable works is a covered Imari porcelain broth
mounted in silver now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum (no. 2012.205.2a-c) and a
pair of large Imari porcelain lidded bowls with silver mounts 1722-1726
now in the collection of the Musée des Arts décoratifs in Paris (inv. GR 426.A and GR 426.B).
His production is characterized by the use of exotic materials, porcelain, hard stone or lacquer
lacquer that he embellishes with a frame of precious metal.
The porcelain very damaged.
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