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Subject:Please help date this Mille Fleur dish
Posted By: Tom W. Fri, Oct 19, 2018 IP: 184.98.118.221

I believe this is Chinese, but the underside does not have a reign mark, just the grape cluster.
Though it may not be easy to see in the picture, the ground between the flowers is gold.
I'm interested in knowing if this can be accurately dated and confirmed that it is Chinese.
Thanks for your help





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Subject:Re: Please help date this Mille Fleur dish
Posted By: Bill H Sat, Oct 20, 2018

This millefleurs pattern is found on black, gilt and, less often, red grounds with a period mark of Guangxu. I've collected quite a few pieces of the Guangxu era and have seen many others with Qianlong marks, the latter usually of the Republic period, in my experience. This is my first encounter with grapes on the base, and I would opine that the kilns might have experimented with a transitional mark such as this in the early Republic, while trying to sort out what would sell best under the new political order. Or it could just have been part of a special order by a restaurant or department store in Asia for the same reason. Your variant of the pattern was in production by about 1900, having been preceded by one with a central peony bloom in the Kangxi style.

Here's the earlier pattern with a period Guangxu mark, possibly a stamp, but too rubbed to tell for certain. The piece is a 5.5-inch saucer from a cup & saucer set. The essential style of the floral accents on the underside of the rim are about the same. I looked through Tony Allen’s latest book and couldn’t find an example with the grapes, and neither was one apparent in my only Chinese language book that lists historical marks. Maybe others in the forum have heretofore seen a base like this one with grapes.

Best regards,

Bill H.







Subject:Re: Please help date this Mille Fleur dish
Posted By: Tom W. Mon, Oct 22, 2018

Thank you Bill for your detailed reply. I purchased this, and another like it, along with two like the one you pictured with similar mark. My main question about whether is it Chinese seems to be answered in your reply. I was thinking it may be Japanese because the flowers are so different than the those on the Chinese pieces that came in the lot of 4. It is heavier than the pieces with the Guangxu mark, and the foot rim is a bit smoother. I assumed it was newer, so your speculation that it may be transitional seems possible.


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