Beaker and Saucer
Dateca. 1750
OriginAsia, China, Jingdezhen
MediumHard-paste porcelain
DimensionsBeaker: OH: 2 3/4"; Diam.: 3" Saucer: Diam.: 5 1/4"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase, The Buddy Taub Foundation, Dennis A. Roach and Jill Roach Directors
Object number2013-30,A&B
DescriptionChinese porcelain beaker and saucer decorated in underglaze blue with groups of cloves, nutmeg, and pineapples. Interior rims painted with chain lozenge borders.Label TextThis unusual design depicting a pineapple and nutmeg and clove sprigs was taken from Pierre Pomet's A Compleat History of Drugs (London, 1712) after the original drawings from the French version, Histoire Generale des Drogues (Paris, 1694). Rarely depicted on Chinese export porcelain, few examples of botanical patterns survive. Saucers from a tea service thus decorated were recovered from the wreck of a British East India ship, the Griffin. Returning from China laden with tea, spices, and porcelain, the ship sank off the coast of the Philippines in 1761.
Three plates from a dinner service were excavated from a Philadelphia privy associated with an early house at 13 Gray's (Morris) Alley. The privy’s 1750 closure indicates that the plates were deposited prior to 1750, more than ten years before the Griffin shipwreck. At that time, the house was occupied by William and Patience Annis. A sea captain who traveled regularly around the Atlantic world, Annis could have purchased the plates on a trip to England.
ProvenanceHeirloom & Howard, Ltd.
Exhibition(s)
ca. 1755
ca. 1805
1780-1800
ca. 1750
1780-1800
ca. 1720
Ca.1750
ca. 1765
ca. 1765
ca. 1760
ca. 1760
ca. 1730