A MUGHAL-STYLE PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE VASE
A MUGHAL-STYLE PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE VASE

QIANLONG PERIOD (1736-1795)

Details
A MUGHAL-STYLE PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE VASE
QIANLONG PERIOD (1736-1795)
The vase of flattened ovoid section is delicately carved with four upright, Indian lotus flowers between trefoil borders and separated by slender leaves pendent from the upper border, and the tapering neck is carved with archaistic blades pendent from the rounded mouth rim. The semi-translucent stone is of even, pale greenish-white color.
5 7/8 in. (14.9 cm.) high
Provenance
Spink & Son, Ltd., Lond, 1965.
Private English collection, Oxfordshire.
Exhibited
Chinese Jades from Tang to Qing, Marchant & Son, London, 2010, no. 129.

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Nick Wilson
Nick Wilson

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Lot Essay

Jades influenced by the Mughal style became popular under the reign of the Qianlong Emperor (1736-1795). The skill of Indian lapidaries made a deep impression on the emperor during the mid-reign, elevating these fine and intricate jade pieces to equal, and sometimes even higher status than locally carved wares. At some time around 1760, a Palace workshop, known as the 'Tibetan Workshop', was established to carve such wares, and the style continued into the first half of the nineteenth century. Such wares are characterized by a unique hybrid style which incorporates complex Indian design and its preference for thinness and high polish into distinctive Chinese forms, as found in the present vase.

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