Skip to main content
Collections Menu
SAM'S collection
Tea Caddy (originally called Canister)
Tea Caddy (originally called Canister)

Tea Caddy (originally called Canister)

Dateca. 1730-35
Label TextBustling harbor activities associated with trade in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries are featured in the painted scenes on these services. Docks are loaded with barrels and bales of cloth. European merchants and townspeople interact with exotic Middle Eastern and Asian-style figures, dressed in silk robes and wondrous plumed turbans or Chinese-style hats, to represent the distant countries in which the beverages originated. Coffee and tea wares were a major part of the production of Meissen, the first hard-paste porcelain manufactory in Europe.
Object number91.101.6
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, "Porcelain Stories: From China to Europe", February 17, 2000-May 7, 2000 (2/17/2000 - 5/7/2000)Published ReferencesEmerson, Julie, Jennifer Chen, & Mimi Gardner Gates, "Porcelain Stories, From China to Europe", Seattle Art Museum, 2000, pg. 109
Credit LineGift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Nichols
Dimensions4 1/4 in. (10.8 cm), overall height
MediumHard paste porcelain
Tea Caddy (originally called Canister)
Meissen manufactory, German
ca. 1720
Object number: 95.94
Tea Caddy (originally called Canister)
Meissen manufactory, German
ca. 1740
Object number: 76.259.3
Photo: Susan Cole
Meissen manufactory, German
1745
Object number: 2005.16.1
Photo: Susan Dirk
Meissen manufactory, German
ca. 1715-20
Object number: 69.183
Photo: Paul Macapia
Meissen manufactory, German
ca. 1720
Object number: 69.193
Photo: Susan Dirk
Meissen manufactory, German
ca. 1710-13
Object number: 69.177
Photo: Susan Dirk
Meissen manufactory, German
ca. 1710-13
Object number: 69.178
Photo: Paul Macapia
Meissen manufactory, German
ca. 1730-35
Object number: 91.101.8
Tea Caddy (originally called Canister)
ca. 1770
Object number: 55.87
Tea Caddy (originally called Canister)
ca. 1759
Object number: 76.95