編號 104704272

古董 低温陶器 锰地釉底瓷砖板与蓝色荷兰风景画 - 270 mm (沒有保留價)
編號 104704272

古董 低温陶器 锰地釉底瓷砖板与蓝色荷兰风景画 - 270 mm (沒有保留價)
Tile Panel with Manganese Ground and Blue Landscape Scenes
Culture / Period: Dutch Delftware / 18th century
Date / Period: Early to mid-18th century AD
Material: Earthenware
Dimensions: 270 mm x 270 mm; individual tiles: 127 x 127 mm
Condition: Good condition; surface wear, small chips, glaze losses, and age-related marks consistent with use and age
No shipping outside the European Union. Due to complex export regulations concerning cultural goods, this item cannot be shipped outside the EU. Please ensure you have a delivery address within the European Union before placing a bid.
Provenance information:
Object Registration ID: 49
The current owner purchased the tile panel from a private collector, Jan B., in Zwolle.
The previous owner, Jan B. from Zwolle, the Netherlands, stated that the object had been in his collection since an unknown date.
According to the previous owner, the tile panel had previously been in a private collection in the Netherlands since the 1990s.
No further information concerning the earlier ownership history of the object is available.
Background Information:
This decorative tile panel is composed of four Dutch earthenware tiles, painted in blue within octagonal reserves and set against a manganese-purple ground. The scenes include rural and waterside landscapes with architectural elements, boats, fishermen, a church, and windmills. These motifs belong to the well-established Dutch tile tradition of depicting recognisable aspects of everyday life, landscape, and local identity.
During the early to mid-18th century, Dutch Delftware workshops produced large quantities of tiles for domestic interiors. Such tiles were used to decorate fireplaces, kitchens, corridors, and wall surfaces, where they combined practical durability with visual refinement. The use of manganese and blue was characteristic of the period and created a strong decorative contrast, while floral corner motifs helped unify separate tiles into a coherent panel.
The production of tiles such as these required organised workshop practice. Clay bodies were shaped, fired, glazed, and then hand-painted before a final firing fixed the decoration. Although produced in series, each tile retains the individual brushwork of the painter, visible in the landscapes, figures, and architectural details. This balance between repetition and hand-painted variation is an important feature of Dutch tile craftsmanship.
Dutch tiles were widely distributed throughout the Netherlands and exported across Europe, reflecting both the strength of Dutch ceramic production and the popularity of Delft-style decoration. They formed part of the visual language of domestic life in the 18th century, bringing scenes of landscape, trade, fishing, and village life into the home.
This panel forms a tangible connection to the material culture of 18th-century Dutch interiors, where objects of this kind played both a practical and decorative role in daily life.
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