A JADE-INSET CARVED ZITAN RUYI SCEPTER
PROPERTY FROM THE ANITA BALDWIN COLLECTION
A JADE-INSET CARVED ZITAN RUYI SCEPTER

18TH CENTURY

Details
A JADE-INSET CARVED ZITAN RUYI SCEPTER
18TH CENTURY
Each of the three domed jade plaques is carved with figural scenes of immortals or attendants, the lower plaque also with a spotted deer, set within a zitan scepter finely carved around the plaques with lotus scroll incorporating five bats (wufu) around the largest plaque, and with two striding chilong along the shaft.
22 ½ in. (56.3 cm.) long
Provenance
Anita Baldwin (1876-1939) Collection, Los Angeles, California, and thence by descent within the family.

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Olivia Hamilton
Olivia Hamilton

Lot Essay


Ruyi scepters were popular in the 18th and 19th centuries, particularly to be given as gifts on auspicious occasions such as birthdays. They were made in a wide variety of materials and were often decorated, as seen on the present piece, with auspicious emblems. The immortals and the deer on the jade plaques relay a wish for long life, while the five bats (wufu) carved on the scepter represent the Five Blessings (long life, riches, health, love of virtue, and a natural death).

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