06-03-2020

Kunstmuseum Den Haag acquires rare flower pyramids

‘This was the chance of a lifetime’, says director Benno Tempel of the museum’s acquisition of two seventeenth-century Delftware flower pyramids. ‘Very few flower pyramids have survived intact over the centuries, and virtually none as a pair. These are probably the last pair on the open art market.’ The two large pyramid-shaped flower holders were made in Delft around 1690. Their blue-and-white decoration depicts birds, rocks and flowers in a Chinese style. There are only three other sets of flower pyramids of this extraordinary iconic style in the world and just one single vase. Experts had no idea there was a fifth set. Kunstmuseum Den Haag, which has one of the most important museum collections of Delftware in the world, had no flower pyramids, despite the fact that they are the symbol of Delft blue. This purchase therefore makes an ideal addition to the museum’s collection, and also represents a boost to the Dutch national collection.

Royal Blue
The flower pyramids will be displayed on the Rembrandt Association’s stand at TEFAF. The acquisition would not have been possible without the association’s support (courtesy of its National Art Collection Fund, its Van Rijn Fund and Foundation Van Rees-Klatte), and the support of the Mondrian Fund, the Kunstmuseum Fund and BankGiro Loterij. Shortly afterwards the pyramids will be given a prominent position in Royal Blue – William and Mary’s Finest Delftware which will open at Kunstmuseum Den Haag on 21 March. This exhibition, organised by Kunstmuseum Den Haag in collaboration with Het Loo Palace, is an ode to ‘Royal Delft’, the blue-and-white earthenware for which the Netherlands is still famous today. It is based on the collection of stadtholder Willem III and Princess Mary II Stuart, who also became King and Queen of England in 1689. It is likely – given their resemblance to the sets at the Rijksmuseum and the V&A – that each of these flower pyramids was originally topped with a bust in the form of Queen Mary. The museum therefore plans to have these parts reproduced, and mounted on top of the pyramids at the end of March. After Royal Blue the flower pyramids will be given a home in the museum’s period rooms, as part of its permanent Delftware WonderWare exhibit.