A PAIR OF FAMILLE ROSE 'HUNDRED DEER' HU-FORM VASES
A PAIR OF FAMILLE ROSE 'HUNDRED DEER' HU-FORM VASES
A PAIR OF FAMILLE ROSE 'HUNDRED DEER' HU-FORM VASES
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A PAIR OF FAMILLE ROSE 'HUNDRED DEER' HU-FORM VASES
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THE ROBERT B. AND BEATRICE C. MAYER FAMILY COLLECTION
A PAIR OF FAMILLE ROSE 'HUNDRED DEER' HU-FORM VASES

19TH CENTURY

Details
A PAIR OF FAMILLE ROSE 'HUNDRED DEER' HU-FORM VASES
19TH CENTURY
Each vase is decorated with the 'hundred deer' motif, depicting a continuous scene of deer frolicking in grassy meadows and beside a river, all within a rocky, mountainous landscape with pine trees, the shoulder flanked by a pair of coral-red, dragon-scroll handles. The base of each is inscribed with an apocryphal Qianlong seal mark.
17 ¼ in. (43.8 cm.) high
Provenance
Hartman Galleries, November 1968.
Exhibited
Evanston, Illinois, The Mary and Leigh Block Museum, Northwestern University, Fall 1982.

Lot Essay

The ‘hundred deer’ motif was very popular as the landscape depicted contains important symbolic references. The subject of deer has a long history in Chinese art as it refers to the rebus where the Chinese word for ‘deer’ is a homophone for ‘emolument’ or ‘civil service salary’; the ‘hundred deer’ therefore represent the ultimate success, a career in government service in Imperial China. The deer is also associated with Daoism and the Star God of Longevity, Shoulao, while the inclusion of peaches and lingzhi fungus in the decoration is further symbolic of longevity. As such, the subject-matter on the present vase alludes to a multitude of auspicious connotations.

The theme of ‘hundred deer’ was adopted on porcelains in the middle Ming period, and can be seen on a Wanli period (1573-1620) wucai jar in the Musée Guimet, Paris (illustrated in The World’s Great Collections. Oriental Ceramics Vol. 7, Musée Guimet, Paris, Kodansha, Tokyo, 1981, no. 26) and on the pair of large blue and white Wanli jars given to Queen Christina of Sweden by the Portuguese Ambassador (see The World’s Great Collections. Oriental Ceramics Vol. 8, Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, Stockholm, Kodansha, Tokyo, 1982, fig. 247).

Vases of this form and decoration enjoyed popularity during the reign of the Qianlong emperor (1736-1795), and continued to remain popular through the 19th century and into the Guangxu period (1875-1908). A vase similar to the present pair was sold at Christie’s New York, 14-15 September 2017, lot 1272; another similar pair was sold at Christie’s London, 14 May 2013, lot 274; and two other related examples were sold at Christie’s London, 16 April 2014, lots 42 and 43.

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