Tek Sing Wreck Saucer Dish

$128.98

A Tek Sing porcelain plate with a slightly flared rim with a painted naturalistis image in a cobalt blue. The centre is decorated with reeds, which issue from rockwork between a young bamboo and a flowering peony plant. The underside is decorated with three floral sprays to the shoulder and a ring to the rim and foot. The base shows two character marks within a double ring. The dish presents a small chip to the rim.

 

 

tek sing saucer dish
Tek Sing Wreck Saucer Dish
$128.98

adding ninja form or contact 7 ,will give the client an install access to the form page to send a request of ask a question to you, this will be sent via smpt direct to your inbox so you never loose a client or a request from the single product page

The Tek Sing (which means “True Star” in Chinese) was a large Chinese junk, which sank on 6th February 1822 in an area off the South China Sea, known as the “Belvidere Shoals”. Undertaking its attempted journey from Amoy to Jakarta were 1600 emigrants and an enormous cargo, which included silks, spices, and 350,000 pieces of Chinese porcelain. Indeed, some of the cargo was even strapped to the ship’s hull, but its tight packing allowed it to become the largest cargo of Chinese porcelain ever to be salvaged from a wreck. The great loss of life associated with the sinking has led the Tek Sing to be referred to in modern times as the “Titanic of the East” (cf. Nagel Auctions, ‘Tek Sing Treasures’, 2000, TS 137).

To find out more about Tek Sing pottery, please visit our collection page: Tek Sing Shipwreck Pottery

Additional information

Weight 195.5 g
Dimensions 15.2 × 2.1 cm
Culture

Chinese & Oriental

Pottery porcelain

Blue and white porcelain

Region

East Asia