
Getty Museum
Pair of Lidded Vases
Unknown
- Date
- porcelain about 1650–1680; mounts about 1715–1720
- Medium
- Hard-paste porcelain; gilt bronze mounts
- Culture
- Chinese (Kangxi) and French
- Department
- Decorative Arts
- Institution
- Getty Museum
The *marchands-merciers* of eighteenth-century Paris devised ingenious ways to adapt rare and exotic materials to tempt their clients. The dealers purchased lacquer, porcelain, and hardstone vessels or panels and sent them to craftsmen with explicit orders to create interesting and decorative designs by combining the objects with new elements. Combining porcelain with gilt bronze was one of the dealer's main activities. Here Chinese vases were cut down to create smaller lidded vessels used for decoration. The central area of the porcelain was cut and removed, and the shoulders of the vases were joined to their lids with gilt bronze in order to make larger covers.
The authoritative record is held by Getty Museum. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Getty Museum and other institutions.

Pair of Lidded Jars
Getty Museum

Pair of Mounted Lidded Vases
Getty Museum
Pair of Vases
Art Institute of Chicago

Pair of Pot-pourri Bowls
Getty Museum

Lidded Pot
Getty Museum

Lidded Vase
Getty Museum

Pair of Lidded Vases
Getty Museum

Lidded Vase
Getty Museum

Garniture of Three Lidded Vases and Two Open Vases
Getty Museum

Garniture of Three Lidded Vases and Two Open Vases
Getty Museum

Pair of Lidded Vases
Getty Museum

Covered vase, one of a pair
Minneapolis Institute of Art