A SMALL PAIR OF CELADON-GLAZED OCTAGONAL VASES, HU
A SMALL PAIR OF CELADON-GLAZED OCTAGONAL VASES, HU
A SMALL PAIR OF CELADON-GLAZED OCTAGONAL VASES, HU
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A SMALL PAIR OF CELADON-GLAZED OCTAGONAL VASES, HU
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THE WANG XING LOU COLLECTION OF IMPERIAL QING DYNASTY PORCELAIN
A SMALL PAIR OF CELADON-GLAZED OCTAGONAL VASES, HU

QIANLONG SIX-CHARACTER SEAL MARKS IN UNDERGLAZE BLUE AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)

Details
A SMALL PAIR OF CELADON-GLAZED OCTAGONAL VASES, HU
QIANLONG SIX-CHARACTER SEAL MARKS IN UNDERGLAZE BLUE AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)
Each vase is elegantly moulded with short tubular handles to each side of the neck, the body covered overall in a bluish-green glaze.
5 3⁄8 in. (13.8 cm) high
Provenance
Collection of Stephen Junkunc III (1904-1978)
Sold Christie's New York, 21 September 1995, lot 240

Literature
Robert Jacobsen, Ye Peilan and Julian Thompson: Imperial Perfection.The Palace Porcelain of Three Chinese Emperors, Kangxi - Yongzheng - Qianlong, Hong Kong, 2004, pp. 194, no. 73
Exhibited
On loan to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 1997 - 2020

Brought to you by

Marco Almeida (安偉達)
Marco Almeida (安偉達) SVP, Senior International Specialist, Head of Department & Head of Private Sales

Lot Essay

The form and design of the current vases pay deliberate homage to earlier prototypes of archaic bronze hu vases and Song dynasty ceramics. In the 18th century, such archaism was a court-directed initiative and archaic pieces from the imperial collections were sent to Jingdezhen to be reproduced in porcelain: Tang Ying, the Superintendent of the Imperial kilns at Jingdezhen, listed in Taocheng jishi bei (Commemorative Stele on Ceramic Production) in the thirteenth year of the Yongzheng reign (1735), a number of glazes in imitation of Song wares, including ‘moon-white, pale green and deep green, all copied from ancient pieces sent from the Imperial Palace’.

Two related archaistic vases with Qianlong marks, each inscribed on the base with an Imperial poem by the Qianlong Emperor are in the National Palace Museum Collection, Taipei. The poem lines indicate that the vases were used as receptacles for flowers, see Obtaining Refined Enjoyment: The Qianlong Emperors Taste in Ceramics, Taipei, 2012, pl. 85-86. Two further Qianlong-marked examples are illustrated by R. Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, Vol. Two, London, 1994, p. 216, nos. 874-875, and another pair of guan-type glazed vases from the J. M. Hu Collection was sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 29 November 2017, lot 2851.

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