A VERY RARE IMPERIAL OPENWORK ALOESWOOD HAIRPIN, BIAN FANG
A VERY RARE IMPERIAL OPENWORK ALOESWOOD HAIRPIN, BIAN FANG

Details
A VERY RARE IMPERIAL OPENWORK ALOESWOOD HAIRPIN, BIAN FANG
QING DYNASTY, LATE 19TH CENTURY

The spatulate fragrant wooden hairpin is carved at one end with a hollowed cylinder, inset with a pearl on either side of the aperture, flanking a carnelian carving in the form of a ruyi-head, the flat panel finely carved in openwork with flowering prunus branches, bordered by a keyfret band and set within a row of delicately inlaid gold florettes
12 1/16 in. (30.6 cm.) long

Lot Essay

The bianfang formed a part of the qi tou, the headdress of Manchu ladies of rank. They were worn across the top of the headdress to stiffen the frame. It appears that a number of materials including jadeite, white jade, gold, and tortoise shell, were used in fashioning the bianfang, and a number of these examples were included in the exhibition, Qingdai Houji Shoushi, 'Jewelry and Accessories of The Royal Consorts of Ching Dynasty', Forbidden City Press, 1992, pp. 25-27, nos. 11-22. Compare also a similar aloeswood example inlaid with gold, pearl and jadeite, sold at Christie's Hong Kong, the Imperial Sale, 27 April 1997, lot 95.

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