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Chinese Porcelain Umbrella Stand Chinese Export Chinoiserie

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  • Vintage Chinese Chinoiserie Blue Porcelain Table Lamp
    Located in West Hartford, CT
    Stunning Chinese porcelain table lamp features hand painted floral motif on a blue ground with applied turquoise foo dog handles. Wired for US and in working order. Comes as shown wi...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Chinese Chinoiserie Table Lamps

    Materials

    Porcelain, Ceramic

  • Chinese Export Chinoiserie Original Oil Painting on Board
    Located in West Hartford, CT
    Stunning, rare, Chinese Export original oil painting on board. Adorned with Chinese dragons and the like. Age appropriate wear. One of a kind. All original including the hooks at to...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Chinese Chinese Export Decorative Art

    Materials

    Wood

  • Chinese Chinoiserie Coromandel Gold Gilt Bar Cabinet on Chrome Stand
    Located in West Hartford, CT
    Beautiful Chinese coromandel bar cabinet on a chrome stand. The hand carved and gilt decorated top cabinet has two doors opening to one glass shelf. Comes with two removable wine rac...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Cabinets

    Materials

    Chrome, Metal

  • Tall Chinoiserie Blue and White Dragon Ginger Jar Urn
    Located in West Hartford, CT
    Chinese blue and white covered urn features a dragon motif on front and back. Displayed on a carved wood pedestal. No hallmarks and there ...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Jars

    Materials

    Ceramic, Porcelain

  • Chinese Orange and White Dragon Vase
    Located in West Hartford, CT
    Large Chinese orange and white vase painted beautifully detailed dragons all around.
    Category

    20th Century Chinese Vases

    Materials

    Porcelain

  • Drexel Heritage Chinoiserie Black Lacquer Breakfront China Cabinet Sideboard
    By Drexel
    Located in West Hartford, CT
    Stunning Drexel Et Cetera liine china cabinet circa 1978. Features Chinoiserie japanned black lacquer hand painted motif with gold detail showing landscape of florals/flowers/animal...
    Category

    Vintage 1970s American Chinoiserie Sideboards

    Materials

    Glass, Wood, Lacquer

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  • Vintage Chinese Porcelain Umbrella Stand
    Located in Los Angeles, CA
    Embrace the timeless allure of our extraordinary vintage Chinese umbrella stand, meticulously crafted from porcelain and in excellent co...
    Category

    Vintage 1950s Vases

    Materials

    Porcelain, Wood, Paint

    Vintage Chinese Porcelain Umbrella Stand
    $589 Sale Price
    24% Off
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  • Chinese Export Famille Verte Porcelain & French Ormolu Chinoiserie Centerpiece
    By Edward Holmes Baldock
    Located in Los Angeles, CA
    A very fine and large 19th century Chinese export famille verte porcelain and French figural ormolu-mounted Chinoiserie style centerpiece jardinière, in the manner of Edward Holmes Baldock (1777-1845). The circular-ovoid porcelain bowl or cachepot, maybe 18th century Jiaqing period (unverified), decorated with a blue and purple ground background with parcel gilt depicting pagodas, trees, mountains and landscape scenes, flanking scrolled handles issuing from the base and ending with a finely chased ormolu pierced acanthus rim. The two ends with a projected mask of Chinese Imperial lions or foo dogs, surmounted and raised on six finely chased ormolu masks of Bacchus satyrs flanked by seashell-like mounts. The Ormolu, circa Paris, 1880. The Porcelain circa 1800 (Maybe 18th century.) Measures: Height: 15 3/4 inches (40 cm.) Overall width: 21 inches (53.4 cm.) Depth: 17 inches (43.2 cm.) Edward Holmes Baldock (1777-1845) was a prominent London furniture dealer to the Royal Family, father of Edward Holmes Baldock. He was first listed in the London trade directories in 1805. That listing had him operating out of No.7 Hanway Street in London, where he was described as selling "china and glass". An updated listing in 1821 described his business as "an antique furniture and ornamental furniture dealer", and in 1826 as a buyer and seller of "china, cabinets, screens, bronzes etc". Between 1832 and 1837 he sold earthenware and glass products to William IV, and upon the ascendancy of Queen Victoria in 1837, sold china until his death in 1845. Baldock was one of the first antique dealers and is similar to the 18th century marchands-merciers Dominique Daguerre and Simon-Philippe. He was the father of Edward Holmes Baldock (1812-1875), a British Conservative Party politician, and of Mary Frances Baldock, wife of the philatelist W. A. S. Westoby. Famille Verte Famille verte (????, Kangxi wucai...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century French Chinoiserie Planters, Cachepots and Jardinières

    Materials

    Ormolu

  • Chinese Export Porcelain Rose Canton Cache Pot & Stand
    Located in Downingtown, PA
    Chinese Export Porcelain Rose Canton Cache Pot & Stand, 1820-1840 The large hexagonal-shaped Chinese Export porcelain cache pot has six panels with different scenes from Chinese ...
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century Chinese Chinese Export Planters, Cachepots an...

    Materials

    Porcelain

  • Pair Rare John Campbell Terracotta Chinoiserie Planters or Umbrella Stands
    Located in Melbourne, AU
    An exceptionally rare pair of John Campbell planter pots. The design is attributed to John Cambell's son, Rupert John Campbell. John Campbell produced decorative pots at his brick works and pottery in Launceston, Tasmania from 1880 until 1975. Rupert John inherited his father's works and was a skilled artisan and potter. He developed presses for decorative pottery. This beautiful pair of jardinières likely date to the early 1900s. They were passed down through three generations. The original owner gave them to her son. In the 1980s the (then elderly) son gifted them to a friend (the last owner before this sale). At the time they received them they were made aware of their age and rarity. Now, another forty years later, they are potentially the only pair in existence. Only one similar John Campbell un-glazed terracotta 'umbrella stand' can be found on record. It was sold in 2008 in Tasmania, at a 'Fine Colonial Decorative Arts' auction run by Mossgreen Auctions, a reputable auction house, though since closed. I can find no other reference to this model, except an acknowledgement of the existence of an un-glazed terracotta umbrella stand, in the definitive record of Campbell's work by Kevin Power, 'John Campbell Pottery: Recollections and Collections' published 2014. These are of the same design and size but were manufactured with drainage holes in the base. They were clearly decorated using a press but the clay slabs were pushed into the press by hand. The interior of each pot shows the marks of hammers used to force the clay into the face of the press pattern. They have a hand-crafted appearance, with hand finished mould lines to each side and there are pressing faults apparent in various areas of the pattern. Tasmania was notably independent in production of most household goods, due to the isolation of the colony right up until the turn of the 19th century. Being at the farthest reaches of the British Empire, settled as a penal colony, with a relatively low consumer population, it was not a market for the high-volume import of domestic goods. As a consequence, household wares and decorative pieces produced in Tasmania through the 19th century represent a wholly independent category of Australian colonial design, production and craft. These pots are highly collectable and scarce artifacts of one of Tasmania’s earliest industries. In aesthetic terms, many Tasmanian artifacts are notable for following British, Georgian and Victorian fashions but with a colonial character of their own devising. Local characteristics became a stronger feature of Tasmanian decoration over time. Note the classical Georgian/Victorian chinoiserie motif of a bird foraging among rushes. In this case, the local interpretation depicts a Brolga (the largest Australian wetland bird) foraging amongst native Australian reeds and water lilies. Another of the things that sets early Tasmanian artifacts apart is the way in which necessity forced artistic production in pottery to be less refined than that of their British counterparts. A broad range of products had to be produced to meet local requirements, often by a single producer. John Campbell’s pottery is a great example of this practical necessity. It produced everything from industrial drainage pipes and bricks to household pottery and decorative items, all from a relatively small family run factory. Their domestic wares were so well trusted and appreciated that they by the 1940s they made their way all over the mainland of Australia. Under these circumstances, the refinement of decorative technique was not as great a priority as utility, consistent quality of production and durability. As a consequence, Australian colonial works and their early 20th century descendants such as these pots, are hugely appealing. They have an idiosyncratic and vernacular appearance, with British and European stylistic trends of their day overlaying a base of inventiveness, local interpretation and sturdy functionality. We hope you can appreciate the rarity and significance of this well-preserved pair of planter...
    Category

    Vintage 1930s Australian Chinoiserie Planters, Cachepots and Jardinières

    Materials

    Terracotta

  • Mid-Century Chinese Chinoiserie Porcelain Fish Bowl
    Located in Middletown, MD
    A beautiful chinoiserie fish bowl with a rich color palette featuring shades of blue, green, tan burgundy/mauve on a crisp white background. Fitt...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Chinese Chinoiserie Planters, Cachepots and Jardinières

    Materials

    Porcelain

  • Wonderful Hand Painted Chinoiserie Tole Lions Head Paw Feet Umbrella Stand
    Located in Roslyn, NY
    A Wonderful Hand Painted White With Gold Chinoiserie Tole Lions Head With Paw Feet And Lions Mask Faces Umbrella Stand That May Also Be Used As A planter
    Category

    20th Century Chinoiserie Planters, Cachepots and Jardinières

    Materials

    Metal

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