Selection of Tek Sing Bowls with Peony

£ 85.00

A fine selection of Tek Sing porcelain bowls, each displaying different hues of underglaze blue pigment. The bowls stand on a tall ringed base and rise to a round body with a wide mouth. The bowls feature a flowering peony and bamboo neck to rockwork. The centre of the bowl displays a floral motif and a character marking to the base which is now covered by the previous owner’s collection number. The base also has the official Tek Sing sticker.

INDIVIDUALLY PRICED.

Date: Circa 18th-19th Century AD
Provenance: From the Tek Sing shipwreck, sunk in 1822 and recovered in 1999.
Condition: Fine condition, with minor deposits and encrustations. Some discolouration might be visible on some parts of the bowl due to age and seawater exposure. Chips to the rim of both bowls along with a surface crack to the side of item B.
SKU: LD-1023 Category: Tags: ,

It was at the port of Amoy that the Tek Sing – or True Star – a large junk, was moored. Bound for Jakarta, she was loaded with precious cargo: porcelain, silks, spices, and medicines. There was so much cargo that some was even strapped to the outside of the ship’s hull. Antique porcelain from a wreck can be worth more than its weight in gold, so the treasure hunters were keen to have the haul examined by experts. They were surprised to find that the porcelain originated from many different places and dates. Some pieces must have been around 100 years old when they were loaded. Tek Sing’s porcelain cargo had been packed so tightly that even after nearly two hundred years under the silt and coral, many examples were in almost pristine condition. On May 12, 1999, Michael Hatcher discovered the wreck of the Tek Sing in an area of the South China sea, north of Java. His crew raised about 350,000 pieces of the ship’s cargo in what is described as the largest sunken cache of Chinese porcelain ever recovered.

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Culture

Pottery and Porcelain

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