Few complete Meissen porcelain garnitures have survived from the 18th century, and most are now in public collections. The vases in the present lot were probably made in the 1720s and then held in the factory stores until they were selected to be decorated together as a garniture in the 1740s. As such, they form part of the last sustained exercise in chinoiserie decoration executed at Meissen in the style established twenty years earlier Johann Gregorius Höroldt and it is interesting to note that the scene of a figure riding an elephant appears to be derived from one of Höroldt's sketches on sheet 18 of the Schulz Codex.
A comparable assembled garniture of vases, dating to the 1730s and with AR marks, is in the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (object number 83.DE.334). Another garniture of vases with related 1740s chinoiserie decoration was sold at Christie's on 21 November 2005, lot 44. A flared beaker vase, similarly decorated but with additional gilding, was in the Hans Syz Collection, and is illustrated by Hans Syz et al., Catalogue of the Hans Syz Collection, Washington D.C., 1979, pp. 72-73, no. 32, and is now in the collection of the National Museum of American History, Washington D.C. (museum no. 64.429). A further flared beaker vase was sold by Bukowskis, Stockholm, on 5 June 2015, lot 1403. A further baluster vase with AR mark and comparable decoration was sold from the Sammlung Oppenheimer, Important Meissen Porcelain, at Sotheby's, New York, on 14 September 2021, lot 80.