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794055

A large famille rose armorial chesnut baseket, Qing dynasty. Qianlong (1736-95).

Estimate
6 000 - 8 000 SEK
523 - 697 EUR
547 - 730 USD
Hammer price
13 000 SEK
Purchasing info
For condition report contact specialist
Cecilia Nordström
Stockholm
Cecilia Nordström
Head Specialist Asian Ceramics and Works of Art, European Ceramics and Glass
+46 (0)739 40 08 02
A large famille rose armorial chesnut baseket, Qing dynasty. Qianlong (1736-95).

Of oval shape with pierced sides, decorated with the coat of arms. Lenght 38 cm. Width 27 cm. Heigth 9 cm.

Restored.

Provenance

The arms are unknown but the style of the mantling and the shield suggests a Dutch or Scandinavian family. It is most likely taken from a bookplate. The squirrel with its arms up like this is supposed to be cracking nuts, missing here, and appears thus in the arms of the Hervey family, as used in 1636, by William and Thomas Hervey of Dorchester, Massachusetts.
The crest of a squirrel is used by the Sichterman family, with a well-known Chinese armorial service ordered in the eighteenth century, but their coat of arms has a squirrel on a gold ground. The French family of Nicholas Fouquet, Finance Minister for Louis XIV has a standing squirrel on his coat of arms.
It has also been suggested, by Elinor Gordon among others, that these might have been arms used by Harry Lee II (1730-1787) of Westmoreland County, Virginia Colony in America. The crest is similar and the chequy motif also features in the arms of Lee.
The division of the blazon in half is similar in style to some Portuguese armorials and these dishes are known to have been in a Portuguese collection but they remain unidentified.