A RARE PAIR OF GRISAILLE-DECORATED CIRCULAR BOXES AND COVERS
THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
A RARE PAIR OF GRISAILLE-DECORATED CIRCULAR BOXES AND COVERS

TIHEDIAN ZHI HALL MARK IN IRON RED, TONGZHI/GUANGXU PERIOD (1862-1908)

Details
A RARE PAIR OF GRISAILLE-DECORATED CIRCULAR BOXES AND COVERS
TIHEDIAN ZHI HALL MARK IN IRON RED, TONGZHI/GUANGXU PERIOD (1862-1908)
Each domed cover is decorated in grisaille with a central flower head encircled by a fruiting peach branch, a convolvulous vine, a flowering crab apple branch, narcissus, nandina and lingzhi, all of which are repeated on the sides of the box. There are bands of key fret at the rims and encircling the foot, and all is reserved on a lemon-yellow ground.
8 3/8 in. (21.3 cm.) diam.

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Michael Bass

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Lot Essay

The Tihedian zhi (Hall of Manifest Harmony) was one of the six palaces in the northwestern sector of the Forbidden City where the Empress Dowager Cixi lived during much of her tenure as Regent to her son, Emperor Tongzhi (see R. Longsdorf, 'The Imperial Tongzhi Wedding Porcelain', Orientations, October 1996, pp. 67-70). Special porcelains, such as the present boxes, were designed and produced for several of these palaces. As such, porcelains were usually marked with the name of their palace designation. In another article by R. Longsdorf, 'Dayazhai Ware: Empress Dowager Porcelain', Orientations, March 1992, p. 56, the author writes that such porcelains were produced from the Tongzhi or early Guangxu periods under the supervision of the Empress Dowager Cixi.
A pair of large grisaille-decorated yellow-ground jardinières with the same hall mark written in iron red in a line was sold at Christie's New York, 15-16 September 2011, lot 1599.

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