Related works :This decoration appears on at least six known armorial services, all made for Dutch families.
A plate from the service Geelvinck/Graafland is illustrated by Hervouët & Bruneau in La Porcelaine des Compagnies des Indes à Décor Occidental, Paris, 1986, p. 316, fig. 13.87 (Van Leeuwen, La Haye).
Another plate, from the Mottahedeh collection, from the service Geelvinck/Graafland is illustrated by Howard & Ayers in China for the West, London and New York, 1978, vol.II, p.394, no. 391.
Another plate, from the service Geelvinck/Graafland is in the collection of the Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam) and illustrated by D. F. Lunsingh Scheurleer in Chinese Export Porcelain, London 1974, fig. 284.
A plate, from the service van Gergen van der Gijp/van Beaumont Cornelis in the Reeves Center Collection is illustrated by Thomas V. Litzenburg, Jr in Chinese Export Porcelain in the Reeves Center Collection at Washington and Lee University (2003, p. 187, no. 183).
A plate, from the service van Gergen van der Gijp/van Beaumont Cornelis is illustrated in the catalogue of the exhibition L’Odyssée de la Porcelaine chinoise (2003, p. 212, no. 164).
A plate is illustrated by Howard in The Choice of the Private Trader, London, 1994, p. 82, n° 66.
A plate, from the collection of the British Museum (London) is illustrated by Regina Krahl & Jessica Harrison-Hall in Ancient Chinese Trade Ceramics From The British Museum, pp. 140-143.
A plate, from the collections of the Royal Museums of Art and History in Brussels is illustrated by Jörg in Chinese Export Porcelain from theRoyal Museums of Art and History in Brussels, pl. 78.
A plate, from the collection Cunha Alves, is illustrated in From East to West, the Quest for Chinese Export Porcelaine with Western Themes (1695-1815), p. 128, no. 74.
A charger of the same scene dated 1741 is in the Victoria and Albert Museum, illustrated by W. B. Honey, Guide to Later Porcelain, pl.113b.
See also The Chinese Porcelain Company. The Age of Gallantry, Catalogue, 1995, p. 133.