A MOTTLED SANDWICHED GREEN GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE
A MOTTLED SANDWICHED GREEN GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE

Details
A MOTTLED SANDWICHED GREEN GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE
1730-1860

Of compressed form with a concave foot, with a layer of rich opaque green glass mottled with darker specks sandwiched between transparent layers, stopper
1 15/16 in. (4.99 cm.) high
Provenance
Ko Collection, Tianjin, 1943
Christie's London, 8 November 1976, lot 70
Literature
Moss et. al., The Art of the Chinese Snuff Bottle, The J & J Collection, vol. 2, no. 326
Exhibited
Christie's New York, 1993
Empress Place Museum, Singapore, 1994
Museum für Kunsthandwerk, Frankfurt 1996-1997
Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art, London, 1997
Naples Museum of Art, Florida, 2001 - 2002
Portland Museum of Art, Portland, Oregon, 2002
National Museum of History, Taipei, 2002
International Asian Art Fair, Seventh Regiment Armory, New York, 2003
Poly Art Museum, Beijing, October 2003

Lot Essay

This bottle is of the type which must have been blown into a standard mould since many examples of this shape are known and they frequently show signs of the two-part mould which contained them. The material here resembles a particular type of jadeite with deep emerald-green markings interspersed with black, such as the jadeite used in making the bottle illustrated by Bob C. Stevens, The Collector's Book of Snuff Bottles, no. 1014.

For two similar green sandwiched glass bottles still in the Imperial Collection, see Masterpieces of Snuff Bottles in the Palace Museum, Beijing, 1995, pp. 84 and 85, nos. 63 and 65. And for a group of green sandwiched glass bottles in The Victoria and Albert Museum, acquired by the Museum of Practical Geology by 1880, see H. White, Snuff Bottles from China, London, 1992, pl. 67.

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