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Late 19th century Chinese porcelain brush washer / ink pot of square form, painted in polychrome enamels with flowers, Chinese sleeve vase, two 20th century Chinese vases and pair saucers painted with immortals, money and poems - red painted Guangxu marks. Provenance: All purchased in China in the 1960s (6) CONDITION REPORT Ink pot - chip to neck; Floral vase - good condition; Small figure vase - good condition; Pair of saucers - both in good condition; Sleeve vase - star crack to base
An interesting reference collection of late 18th, 19th and 20th Century British porcelain and bone china coffee cans, tea cups and saucers, including - Herculaneum coffee can and saucer with a stylised leaf scroll pattern in gilt and brown, and a Worcester Barr example, a Mintons cup and saucer with a design in gilt of birds in branches (pattern No. 470), a pair of red mark Derby cups painted with a stylised leaf pattern in purple and gilt and matching saucer, a Worcester cup and saucer painted with standing Chinese figures within a garden landscape and gilded, and approximately 100 other pieces, various
A modern Chinese porcelain baluster form vase decorated with a landscape, Chinese blue & white bowl, and specimen vase (3) Condition Report / Extra Information Large vase - h.21cm, no apparent faults. Blue & white bowl - h.7cm, dia.15cm, slightly pitted to the centre. Small vase - h.9cm, dia.5cm, pitted to the body.
19th century AD. A tin-glazed bowl with deep basal ring, slightly flared rim; blue floral and geometric motifs to the outer face. From an important London collection, acquired in the 1970s. The Tek Sing (True Star) wreck is one of the famous recovery stories of the 20th century. Sailing from the port of Xiamen (then known as Amoy) in February 1822 the vessel Tek Sing was bound for Jakarta, Indonesia laden with porcelain goods and 1600 Chinese emigrants. The captain decided to pass through the Gaspar Strait, between the Bangka-Belitung Islands, and ran aground on a reef. The vessel sank in about 100 feet of water. The next morning, February 7, an English East Indiaman captained by James Pearl, passing through the same waters, encountered debris and some survivors and managed to rescue about 190 of the latter. 223 grams, 14.5cm (5 3/4"). Fine condition.
A Wanli/Tiangi Chinese porcelain bowl, the interior reserve with an image of the god of longevity, and with calligraphic designs to the exterior punctuated with scholarly reserves, character marks to the base 27cm dia., and presented on wooden stand. The lot also includes a cut down baluster vase with cracked ice and prunus decoration and Qing dynasty Artemisia mark to the base, and a later ginger jar as a lamp base AF (3) The bowl has been cleanly broken and repaired, there are small chips to the interior ground out rim of the baluster vase, there are cracks to the ginger jar
A group of porcelain coffee cans, early 19th C, including a pair of Crown Derby cans painted in the Chantilly Sprig pattern, pair of Bloor Derby cobalt blue and gilt foliate cans, and a bat printed coffee can printed with a rural landscape, together with a late 18th C Chinese porcelain coffee can painted with flowers. (7)
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105996 item(s)/page