A MASSIVE CARVED RHINOCEROS HORN LIBATION CUP
Notice Regarding the Sale of Ivory and Tortoiseshe… Read more
A MASSIVE CARVED RHINOCEROS HORN LIBATION CUP

Details
A MASSIVE CARVED RHINOCEROS HORN LIBATION CUP
QING DYNASTY, 19TH CENTURY

Deeply carved to one end of the long horn with a continuous mountain landscape rising up from rolling waves to depict the Daoist paradise, with Xiwangmu atop a phoenix looking down at Shoulao on a terrace below scrolling clouds, and Li Tieguai walking along a path above further immortals and attendants, a troupe of monkeys clutching peaches before a cave, the Hehe Erxien beside a three-legged toad, cranes in flight and a pair of spotted deer, all nestled between pine and wutong trees, the rim of the cup encircled by dragons amid thick rolling clouds; the wood stand carved with three goats crouching on rockwork amid lingzhi sprigs and further pine and wutong trees (chips to cup rim and extremities)
26 1/4 in. (67 cm.) long, stand
Special notice
Notice Regarding the Sale of Ivory and Tortoiseshell Prospective purchasers are advised that several countries prohibit the importation of property containing ivory or tortoiseshell. Accordingly, prospective purchasers should familiarize themselves with relevant customs regulations prior to bidding if they intend to import this lot into another country.

Lot Essay

Jan Chapman, author of The Art of Rhinoceros Horn Carving in China, London, 1999, describes this type of cup as a 'full-tip cup', one that utilizes the full horn. She explains that the more complex the decoration of the horn surface, the later it was carved with horns such as one exhibited in the Durham University Oriental Museum, op. cit., fig. 38, extravagantly carved and pierced all over, dating to the late 19th century and most probably from Canton. The current lot dates to an earlier period, probably from the early to the mid-19th century, and best relates to another two rhinoceros horn carvings in The Chester Beatty Library, Dublin, illustrated op. cit., nos. 273 and 274.

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