Chinese Transitional Period 'Flying Horse' Bowl, Hatcher Cargo Circa 1640

A Chinese Transitional Period blue and white bowl salvaged from the Hatcher Junk, which sank in circa 1640. The bowl is lavishly decorated: the exterior has a band of flying horses above floral sprays and song birds and the interior features riverscape scenes to the rim and the well. Measures 7cm tall with a diameter of 16.5cm, Christie's Amsterdam auction label to the base (dated 12-13 June 1984). There are a few small spots of staining to the interior but overall the bowl is in remarkably good condition given it's age and history. Please see all photos for confirmation of condition..


The Hatcher Cargo

 

The Hatcher Cargo was recovered from the wreck of a Chinese junk in the South China seas port of Batavia (today Jakarta) by Captain Michael Hatcher in 1983, and was later sold in the Netherlands. They were a small part of what, at the time, was the largest cargo of Chinese porcelain ever recovered in good condition from the sea. Captain Michael Hatcher and his crew brought up about 25,000 pieces of unbroken porcelain from the Hatcher junk which were sold through four sales at Christies in Amsterdam. The very wide diversity and quality of many of the pieces created great interest, and the date was established by the existence in the find of two pieces with the Chinese cyclical date for 1643.
Captain Hatcher returned to the site in 1985 and salvaged over 2,000 more pieces, most of which were sold through a London dealer, Heirloom and Howard. The great majority of the 25,000 pieces were Jingdezhen blue and white, but there were also interesting groups of celadon, blanc-de-Chine, coloured wares and provincial blue-and-white.