A RARE PAINTED ENAMEL YELLOW-GROUND ZHADOU AND COVER
A RARE PAINTED ENAMEL YELLOW-GROUND ZHADOU AND COVER
A RARE PAINTED ENAMEL YELLOW-GROUND ZHADOU AND COVER
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A RARE PAINTED ENAMEL YELLOW-GROUND ZHADOU AND COVER

QIANLONG FOUR-CHARACTER MARK IN BLUE ENAMEL WITHIN A DOUBLE SQUARE AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)

Details
A RARE PAINTED ENAMEL YELLOW-GROUND ZHADOU AND COVER
QIANLONG FOUR-CHARACTER MARK IN BLUE ENAMEL WITHIN A DOUBLE SQUARE AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)
Raised on three gilt-bronze ruyi-head supports joined by a gilt-bronze ring, the zhadou has shallow sides decorated on the exterior with composite flower scroll reserved on a lemon-yellow ground that continues onto the underside of the wide, everted rim which is decorated on top in puce grisaille with four shaped panels with landscape scenes that are separated by scrolling dragons, all on a lemon-yellow ground. The domed cover is encircled by bands of dragon scroll on a turquoise ground and flower scroll on a yellow ground, the two separated by a gilt-bronze band of petal lappets repeated at the base of the knob. The interiors and base are covered in turquoise enamel.
5 5/8 in. (14.3 cm.) diam.
Provenance
Manheim Galleries, New York, 1980s.

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Olivia Hamilton
Olivia Hamilton

Lot Essay

The shape of this vessel and the inclusion of a cover indicate that it is a spittoon or zhadou. A related painted enamel vessel with cover, identified as a covered spittoon, decorated with butterflies amidst flower sprigs, is illustrated by Chuimei Ho and Bennet Bronson in the exhibition catalogue Splendor of China's Forbidden City: The Glorious Reign of Emperor Qianlong, The Field Museum, Chicago, 2004, p. 261, no. 337, where the authors note that spittoons of this type rarely survive outside the palace. See, also, two painted enamel covered spittoons similar to the published example sold at Christie's New York, one with an interior funnel-shaped lining, sold 22 March 2007, lot 180, the other sold 26 March 2010, lot 1174. Although they have a flat everted rim and a domed cover, the shape of these spittoons is not as elegant as that of the present example, and they are not raised on supports. The style of the painting is also very different. The present spittoon has a style of painting and palette similar to that seen on a Beijing enamel yellow-ground tiered vessel and stand offered at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 5 October 2016, lot 3619. The knob on the cover of the tiered vessel is similar to that of the present example.

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