A pair of Dutch Delft blue and white 'harlequin' brush backs, 1st half 18th C.

294
This lot was sold on 2021-10-08 and is no longer available

Dim.: 12,5 x 7 x 2,5 cm (each brush back)
H.: 23 cm (each brush back on stand)

Condition: (UV-checked)
- Both in very good to excellent condition, with minor superficial glaze loss along the rim and two small superficial chips to one of the two.

Ref.: Sotheby's, London, May 20, 2020, for one similar but polychrome example. (sold GBP 4.000) (link)

Provenance: Each with a label on the back inscribed 'Ramaix' for the 'Gaston de Ramaix' collection, Château de Grune, Belgium. The collectors Maurice de Ramaix (1850-1918) (link), a Belgian diplomat and politician, and his son Gaston built a collection of mostly blue and white pieces from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. De Ramaix was a diplomatic attaché in Paris, Constantinople, Vienna, Berlin, The Hague and Persia. Afterward, he returned to Belgium where he became a senator and a member of the Parliament. In 1894, he bought and restored a castle in Grune, Belgium. After his death, De Ramaix’s collection was passed to his eldest son, Gaston (1878-1937), who was also a diplomat. Gaston had a predilection for the Dutch Golden Age and completed his father’s collection. He showcased the remarkable assemblage of Delftware in his seventeenth-century castle surrounded by Dutch paintings and prints from the same era.

Price incl. premium: € 8.925