A PALE CELADON JADE ARCHAISTIC VESSEL AND COVER, TULU
A PALE CELADON JADE ARCHAISTIC VESSEL AND COVER, TULU
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A PALE CELADON JADE ARCHAISTIC VESSEL AND COVER, TULU

QIANLONG PERIOD (1736-1795)

Details
A PALE CELADON JADE ARCHAISTIC VESSEL AND COVER, TULU
QIANLONG PERIOD (1736-1795)
The vessel is carved with a rectangular body and columnar corners rising from four waisted feet. The body is decorated with a band of interlocking serpentine dragons above a further band of stylised dragons, with a pair of dragon-head handles with loose rings to the sides. The cover is surmounted by a pierced coiled dragon finial, surrounded by four further coiled chilongs to the corners. The stone is of an even pale tone.
Provenance
The Baron George De Menasce Collection

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Priscilla Kong
Priscilla Kong

Lot Essay

This very distinctively shaped vessel was carved in imitation of an archaic bronze form, which was used to hold artist’s materials. Coloured pigments were kept in the tubular compartments at each corner and subdivided by wooden compartments. The central compartment held a saucer and water for mixing the colours. For a discussion of the bronze prototypes, see Cheng Te Kun, ‘The T’u-Lu Colour-Container of the Shang-Chou Period’, B.M.F.E.A., no. 37, 1965, pp. 239-249, pl. 1-6, where examples in jade, marble and pottery are also illustrated.
A white jade square vessel of similar form and decoration from the Qing Imperial Collection in Palace Museum, Beijing, is illustrated in Jadeware (III), The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Hong Kong, 1995, p. 190, no. 156. (fig. 1).

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