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Maison de L'oro

Kaiser Porcelain Belvedere Decorative Bowl – Design K. Nossek

Kaiser Porcelain Belvedere Decorative Bowl – Design K. Nossek

Regular price €25,00 EUR
Regular price Sale price €25,00 EUR
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Somewhere in Germany in the 1970s, a designer named K. Nossek sat down and thought: "What if a dinner plate had ambitions?" The result is this magnificent Kaiser Belvedere bowl — a hand-painted landscape scene so detailed you half expect the tiny figures strolling in front of the manor house to wave back at you.

The centrepiece is a beautifully painted neoclassical country house set in a moody, atmospheric landscape — golden skies, dramatic clouds, lush trees, and two elegantly dressed figures who clearly have nowhere to be and all the time in the world to get there. The scene is framed in a quatrefoil cartouche edged in gold, surrounded by sweeping gilt scrollwork on a soft white ground, with a warm dusty-rose border and a delicate embossed rim that catches the light just so.

A word on the signature: Kaiser Porcelain only credited a designer by name on pieces they considered truly special. Having K. Nossek's name printed on the back alongside the pattern name is not a formality — it's a mark of artistic recognition. This bowl isn't just a pretty object; it's a signed work.

In mint condition. Not a scratch, not a chip, not a single regret. The back bears the full Kaiser Germany / Belvedere / Design: K. Nossek mark, plus the number 10 — likely indicating it's part of a numbered series.

  • Brand: Kaiser Porcelain – Germany
  • Pattern: Belvedere
  • Designer: K. Nossek (signed)
  • Material: Fine porcelain with gilt decoration
  • Dimensions: approx. Ø 15.5 cm, height 3.5 cm
  • Weight: 220 g
  • Era: circa 1970s
  • Condition: Mint / as new

⚠️ WARNING: This bowl is so decorative it will immediately render every other object on your sideboard invisible. Maison de L'oro accepts no responsibility for the subsequent rearrangement of your entire dining room, or for any guests who spend the whole dinner staring at the bowl instead of eating. To be fair, the bowl is more interesting than most dinner conversation.

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