Charger
The central motif of this charger was copied directly from Japanese Kakiemon porcelain. However, Westerners gave their own names and meanings to plants and animals on Asian ceramics. Bamboo, for example, was known in Europe as the tea tree, owing to Asia’s association with tea. The decoration around the centre is entirely Western: two borders of foliate scrolls interspersed with winged putti.
Publisher
- Rijksmuseum
Subject
- http://iconclass.org/48A983
- http://iconclass.org/25F3
Type of item
- urn:rijksmuseum:thesaurus:RM0001.THESAU.118
Publisher
- Rijksmuseum
Subject
- http://iconclass.org/48A983
- http://iconclass.org/25F3
Type of item
- urn:rijksmuseum:thesaurus:RM0001.THESAU.118
Providing institution
Aggregator
Rights statement for the media in this item (unless otherwise specified)
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
Rights
- Public Domain
- Publiek Domein
Creation date
- c.1700 - c.1725
Place-Time
- first quarter 18th century
Places
- Delft
- Delft
- urn:rijksmuseum:thesaurus:RM0001.THESAU.3537
- Delft
Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.14266
- BK-1984-27
Extent
- diameter 50 cm
Format
- urn:rijksmuseum:thesaurus:RM0001.THESAU.3945
Language
- nl
Is part of
- collectie: Nederlands tinglazuur aardewerk
Providing country
- Netherlands
Collection name
First time published on Europeana
- 2014-05-27T13:44:35.392Z
Last time updated from providing institution
- 2018-03-17T13:07:06.505Z