The
“Swan” service was ordered in 1736 for the director of the Meissen
manufactory, Heinrich, Graf von Brühl, and originally comprised over
2200 pieces, of which the larger part remained in the family’s
possession until World War II. From around 1880, however, pieces were
lent to museums in Dresden and Berlin or passed on to collectors, so
that by 1900 only 1400 pieces remained at the family’s Silesian seat,
Schloss Pförten. These remaining pieces were either destroyed along with
the castle, or stolen, at the end of World War II, when Russian
soldiers are also said to have thrown plates and saucers into the air to
be used like clay pigeon targets!
In
the December Marouf sale, $88,960 was paid for the chocolate cup and
saucer seen above, modelled 1739-40 by J.J. Kändler and J.F. Eberlein.
The white bodies of the cup and saucer are shell moulded with swans
swimming among bulrushes, decorated with Indianische Blumen and
(as did nearly all pieces in this great service) bear the arms of Count
Brühl and his new wife, Maria Anna Franziska von Kolowrat-Krakowska.
Despite some damage and restoration not originally noted in the sale catalogue, the écuelle and cover from the “Swan” service, seen at right, was sold at $156,220 in the more recent, May sale of the Marouf collection. |
Thursday, November 28, 2013
The Swan Service Dresden China commissioned by Count von Bruhl
Swan Service
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