Details
A VERY RARE PAINTED LACQUER SNUFF BOTTLE
PROBABLY IMPERIAL, ATTRIBUTED TO THE PALACE WORKSHOPS, 1740-1800

Of tapering compressed quatrefoil form, the brown lacquer applied over the textile core and painted with five copper-hued bats in flight on each side, stopper
2 9/16 in. (6.52 cm.) high
Provenance
Ko Collection, Tianjin, 1941
Christie's London, 9 October 1974, lot 175
B. T. Lyons
Sotheby's London, 20 April 1982, lot 161
Hugh M. Moss Ltd.
Literature
Chinese Snuff Bottles, Hong Kong Museum of Art, pp. 105 and 130, no. 251
JICSBS, June 1978, p. 51, no. 251
Moss et. al., The Art of the Chinese Snuff Bottle, The J&J Collection, vol. 2, no. 308
The Art of the Chinese Snuff Bottle, Poly Art Museum, Beijing, p. 126, fig. a
Exhibited
Hong Kong Museum of Art, October-November 1977
Christie's New York, 1993
Empress Place Museum, Singapore, 1994
Museum fur Kunsthandwerk, Frankfurt, 1996-1997
Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art, London, 1997
Naples Museum of Art, Florida, 2002
Portland Museum of Art, Oregon, 2002
National Museum of History, Taipei, 2002
International Asian Art Fair, Seventh Regiment Armory, New York, 2003
Poly Art Museum, Beijing, 2003

Lot Essay

The five bats on each side of the bottle are an extremely fortuitous image, as they provide rebuses for both huge good fortune and for the Five Blessings of longevity, health, wealth, love of virtue and a peaceful death. The bats here are depicted in varying postures of flight, and it is significant that a few are shown upside down because in Chinese, an upside-down bat provides a homophone for 'happiness has arrived'.

Although the style of the lacquer here is typical of Fuzhou, it appears that it was adopted at Court and a range of similar wares made Imperially during the Qianlong period and the height of the Palace workshops. Compare with three lacquer snuff bottles from the Imperial Collection in Beijing, made in very similar style with gold lacquer decorative elements on a brown ground, the first with bats on a double-gourd form, the second with a leaping carp on a foliate-form bottle and the third in the shape of a double-fish, illustrated by Zhu Peichu and Xia Gengqi (eds.), Biyanhu Shihua, History of Snuff Bottles, pl. 52.

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