Oriental
(1700 - 1800)
After Portugal established trade routes to the Far East, the export trade from China to Europe increased, and by the sixteenth century, porcelain makers in China were producing objects made especially for the Western market. European consumers began to demand familiar, useful shapes unknown in China, and models of mugs, jugs, and candlesticks were sent to the Chinese factories to be copied.
The bulk of Chinese Export porcelain was decorated in with underglaze blue pigment, until the beginning of the eighteenth century. From this time, the Chinese potters began to make wares to order decorated with the customers' own coat of arms, which required the use of a broader range of colours. Thousands of aristocratic families, companies, guilds and societies purchased complete dinner services decorated with their armorial crests, mostly ordered through the captains of merchant ships.
The trade in armorial porcelain declined as the European porcelain factories became well established, and very few were made after 1800.
Related objects
There are 83 related objects.< Previous pages: 1 2 3 4 Next >
Z4059 saucer. | D50 dish; commemorative dish. | 88.145/18 vase; heraldic miniature vase. | Z4059 saucer. |
Z4058 saucer. | Z4057 saucer. | Z4054 saucer. | Z4053 saucer. |
Z4052 saucer. | Z4051 saucer. | Z4049 cup. | Z4048 cup. |
Z4047 cup. | Z4046 cup. | Z4045 cup. | Z4044 cup. |
Z4043 cup. | Z4042 cup. | Z4039 cup; tea cup. | Z4038 cup; tea cup. |
Z4037 cup; tea cup. | Z4036 cup; tea cup. | Z4034 cup; tea cup. | Z4032 cup; tea cup. |



