Kan inte nå servern
Temaauktioner online
The Eclectic Collection F772
Auktion:
Helge Dahlman F782
Auktion:
Birds by Toikka – Part 2 F728
Auktion:
En privat samling handknutna bruksföremål från Persien E1309
Auktion:
Silver Linings E1279
Auktion:
Chalet Interiors E1217
Auktion:
Arne Jones E1299
Auktion:
Liveauktioner
Contemporary Art & Design 670
Auktion: 21−22 april 2026
Important Timepieces 671
Auktion: 21 april 2026
Modern Art & Design 672
Auktion: 20−21 maj 2026
Important Spring Sale 673
Auktion: 10−12 juni 2026
981
1443258

Rökelsekar med lock, s.k. koro, porslin, Kakiemon, Japan, Edo perioden (1603-1868).

Utropspris
4 000 - 6 000 SEK
380 - 569 EUR
434 - 651 USD
Klubbat pris
9 000 SEK
Budgivning kräver ett särskilt godkännande.
Köpinformation
För konditionsrapport kontakta specialist
Linn Andersson Bennich
Stockholm
Linn Andersson Bennich
Assisterande specialist konsthantverk
+46 (0)707 88 84 75
Rökelsekar med lock, s.k. koro, porslin, Kakiemon, Japan, Edo perioden (1603-1868).

Tripod med hänklar. Dekor i emaljfärger med motiv av blommor. Locket med genombruten dekor samt lockknopp i form av frukt. Höjd 11,5 cm.

Skador, lagningar.

Utställningar

Compare a similar incense burner (koro)
late 17th century, in the Metropolitan Museum, New York, from the Hans Syz Collection, Gift of Stephan B. Syz and John D. Syz, 1995. Accession Number: 1995.268.114a, b.

Övrig information

The Dr. Syz collection in the Metropolitan Museum chart the migration of models and patterns from East to West. Documenting a continuous process of influence and adaptation, these pieces provide a discriminating review of the nuances of stylistic change resulting from three centuries of trade.

Among the most telling comparisons is that of a Japanese incense burner (koro) and its Viennese counterpart. The Japanese model, finely enameled in a palette of light coral, green, and blue in the kakiemon style of late-seventeenth-century Japanese porcelain, is known to have been exported to Europe, as Augustus the Strong, elector of Saxony, acquired an example in 1723. Interesting is that while no records are known to survive from Du Paquier's factory, it is likely that the koro reached Vienna, as it had Dresden, through the intermediacy of a merchant. In Vienna Du Paquier boldly converted the Japanese form to a European one with new proportions, Baroque mask feet, European pastoral scenes.