A pair of Meissen porcelain dishes from the dinner service with iron red mosaic border for Frederick II - image-1
A pair of Meissen porcelain dishes from the dinner service with iron red mosaic border for Frederick II - image-2
A pair of Meissen porcelain dishes from the dinner service with iron red mosaic border for Frederick II - image-3
A pair of Meissen porcelain dishes from the dinner service with iron red mosaic border for Frederick II - image-1A pair of Meissen porcelain dishes from the dinner service with iron red mosaic border for Frederick II - image-2A pair of Meissen porcelain dishes from the dinner service with iron red mosaic border for Frederick II - image-3

Lot 1376 Dα

A pair of Meissen porcelain dishes from the dinner service with iron red mosaic border for Frederick II

Auction 1230 - overview Cologne
17.11.2023, 10:00 - Decorative Arts - Silver, Porcelain, Faience
Estimate: 7.000 € - 8.000 €

A pair of Meissen porcelain dishes from the dinner service with iron red mosaic border for Frederick II

"Prussian musical design" model. The iron red Oriental flowers in the centre surrounded by trophies alternating with floral reliefs in gilt rimmed surrounds, the border with gold scale pattern design on an iron red ground. Blue crossed swords mark, dreher's no. 36. Some unobtrusive glaze faults, a scratch through the central flower. D 30.5 - 31 cm.
1761/62.

In 1760, King Friedrich II ordered a service with “mathematical instruments” from Meissen for Jean-Baptiste Boyer Marquis d´Argens (1703 – 1771). The service was decorated using his own designs and produced in the following year. Meissen referred to this elaborate relief décor as “Prussian musical design”.
The dinner service with red mosaic borders and painted with red "indianische blumen" originally comprised 144 dinner plates, 48 soup bowls, numerous dishes and tureens as well as cutlery handles, butter dishes, salt barrels and leaf-shaped bowls (designed as vine leaves and poplar leaves), cloches, candlesticks and centrepieces. A hand drawing by the king himself exists describing the "indianische blumen" that were to decorate the service along with the note: “With regards to the painted décor, it should be observed that on all of the pieces no other colour is to be used but red, namely the colour preferred by his royal majesty the king of Poland, mixed with gold”. Dessert plates and additional leaf-shaped dishes were added to the service in 1763.
Today, we no longer know whether the king used the service, and if so in what capacity. It is only known that 20 years later in 1781 he gave it as a gift to his general Wichard von Möllendorff, after whom it is now named.

Provenance

South German private collection.

Literature

Cf. Wittwer, "hat der König von Preußen die schleunige Verferttigung verschiedener Bestellungen ernstlich begehret" Friedrich der Große und das Meißener Porzellan, in: Keramos 208/2010, p. 54 ff.
Cf. cat. Triumph der Blauen Schwerter. Meissener Porzellan für Adel und Bürgertum 1710 - 1815, Dresden 2010, no. 294.