On view

South Asian Art

American Eagle plate,

ca. 1790

Chinese
Qing dynasty, 1644–1912
y1965-281

More Context

<p>This American eagle plate comes from Morven, the Princeton estate of Richard Stockton, Class of 1748 and signer of the Declaration of Independence. A large amount of porcelain was being shipped from China by the late eighteenth century, expensive dinner sets with armorial crests and custom designs also were commissioned by wealthy families and institutions. While the porcelain bodies would have been manufactured in China, the painted designs could have been made in China or by Western craftsmen after import.</p>

Information

Title
American Eagle plate
Dates

ca. 1790

Medium
Porcelain with overglaze enamels
Dimensions
h. 2.4 cm., diam. 24.7 cm. (15/16 x 9 3/4 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Clement K. Corbin, Class of 1902
Object Number
y1965-281
Place Made

China

Period
Materials
Techniques

Morven, the Princeton estate of Richard Stockton, Class of 1748 (1730–1781) and signer of the Declaration of Independence; Clement K. Corbin, Class of 1902 until 1965; given to the Princeton University Art Museum, 1965.