Works of Art
A set of six Chinese export enamel plaques, possibly produced in Beijing or Canton 清代外銷銅胎畫琺瑯一組(六件)
Further images
Provenance
One pair: Catherine II, Empress of Russia. (By repute, part of a group of objects presented to her by the Qianlong emperor of China, reigned 1736 -1795.)
Prince Henry of Prussia (1726 - 1802), ambassador of the Prussian king, Frederick II, to the court of St Petersburg.
Princess Louise of Prussia (1770 - 1836), niece of the above (married to Prince Anthony Radziwill in 1796).
The Radziwill family.
Princess Margaret Radziwill (1875 - 1962) (married to Count Francis Potocki)
Rose Potocki (married Count Casimir Mycielski).
The Mycielski family by descent.
Exhibitions
Similar examples:
Rijksmuseum. Panel with Enamels on Copper. c. 1725–1750. Enamel on copper.
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.
A set of six Chinese export enamel plaques, possibly produced in Beijing or Canton 清代外銷銅胎畫琺瑯一組(六件)
China, 18th Century
This exceptionally rare suite of six Chinese painted enamel pictures in their original frames, represents one of the most ambitious achievements of Qing enamelling. Executed in vitreous enamels on copper and conceived as framed wall pictures rather than decoration for vessels, the set has the character of a miniature interior cycle. Each scene is staged within a sequence of elegant rooms and verandas, articulated by lattice screens, moon gates, receding corridors and sweeping curtains that hang like theatre drapery. The effect is quietly immersive. These are not simply images of figures, but images of spaces, and of a world in which architecture, dress and objects together convey order, taste and cultivated ease.
Painted enamels at this level demanded extraordinary control. Unlike ink or oil, enamel is fired glass, built through repeated kiln firings in which colour, line and modelling must survive heat without blooming, shifting or losing definition. The challenge becomes greater on a pictorial plaque, where expression, perspective and architectural geometry are integral to the composition. Here, that technical daring disappears into refinement. Soft faces, translucent garments and subtle shadows are rendered with a delicacy that belies the medium’s hardness. The scenes feel effortless precisely because they are not.
As a suite, the six pictures read as a coherent drama of domestic life. A household gathers beneath a turquoise hanging, the room anchored by calligraphy and a painting, as if the interior itself were declaring cultivated taste. Elsewhere an elder sits attended and entertained, the moment poised between affection and etiquette. Children drift through the compositions with the naturalness of lived time, while animals punctuate the rooms and thresholds, adding warmth and vitality. These details are not inc idental. They are the texture of prosperity, the vocabulary of a refined household, and a glimpse into Qing ideals of domestic harmony.
The set also speaks to the remarkable visual intelligence of eighteenth-century Chinese workshops. Perspective and recession are deployed with confidence, yet they remain disciplined by Chinese spatial logic and by the primacy of pattern, surface and symmetry. In other words, the pictures register a sophisticated awareness of Europea n optical ideas without surrendering to them. Global exchange is present but absorbed into a distinctly Qing pictorial language.
Complete surviving suites of enamel pictures are exceptionally rare. Individual plaques were easily separated, damaged, or lost, and the medium itself was vulnerable to later mishandling and re framing. Only eight other panels are currently known: six in the Rijksmuseum, and a further pair in the Palmer Collection, Hong Kong. Within this tiny recorded corpus, the present suite is distinguished not only by its completeness as a unified set of six, but by its superior quality and notably fresh condition, with exceptional clarity of drawing and unusually well-preserved colour. As such, it stands among the most important survivals of its type, offering in miniature a world of architecture, ceremony and intimacy, and a compelling demonstration of how enamel, one of the most demanding materials of the period, could be made to behave like pure painting.
Painted enamels on copper were produced in both the southern export centres, especially Guangzhou or Canton, and in workshops serving the court in Beijing, with designs, materials, and even craftsmen moving between these spheres. Canton became a major centre of enamelling, capable of producing works for international markets while also supplying luxury objects that could circulate upwards through officials and tribute networks. The present pictures could plausibly have been made in Canton, yet their refinement points to a higher destination than ordinary commerce. The extraordinary control of line and modelling, the subtlety of the palette, and the assurance with which architectural space is constructed suggest a commission intended for the highest level, either produced within court directed workshops or made in the south to court standards and destined for the Emperor’s collection.
Especially compelling in this context is the association by repute with Catherine II, Empress of Russia. The provenance of one pair is recorded as Catherine the Great, said to have formed part of a group of objects presented to her by the Qianlong Emperor, who reigned 1736 to 1795.
This sits firmly in the realm of diplomatic gifting rather than trade and reinforces the likelihood that these pictures, whatever their precise place of manufacture, were conceived for imperial appreciation. Their quality is consistent with objects intended not simply to delight, but to represent the sophistication of Qing craftsmanship at the highest level, suitable for the exchange of prestige between courts.