
Getty Museum
Pair of Lidded Vases
Meissen Porcelain Manufactory- Date
- before 1733; lids about 1760
- Medium
- Hard-paste porcelain; polychrome enamel decoration; gilding
- Culture
- German
- Department
- Decorative Arts
- Institution
- Getty Museum
Potters at the Meissen porcelain manufactory imitated the shape and decoration of Chinese porcelain when they made these vases. The form copies a traditional Chinese design known today as a ginger jar, with flat shoulders and a wide, curving base. The bold flower decorations of rocks, birds, and blossoms, known at Meissen as *Indianische Blumen* (East Indies flowers), were a European interpretation of more delicate Chinese and Japanese ornament. The term *Indianische Blumen* derives from the name of the largest European importer of Asian ceramics in the 1700s, the Dutch East India Company.
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