TWO CLOISONNE ENAMEL 'TWIN FISH' VASES
TWO CLOISONNE ENAMEL 'TWIN FISH' VASES
TWO CLOISONNE ENAMEL 'TWIN FISH' VASES
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TWO CLOISONNE ENAMEL 'TWIN FISH' VASES
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TWO CLOISONNE ENAMEL 'TWIN FISH' VASES

CHINA, QING DYNASTY, QIANLONG-JIAQING PERIOD (1736-1820)

Details
TWO CLOISONNE ENAMEL 'TWIN FISH' VASES
CHINA, QING DYNASTY, QIANLONG-JIAQING PERIOD (1736-1820)
Each vase cast as two entwined fish supported on their tails, open mouths forming the aperture of each vase, one with black and white body, the other with red and white body, heads and tails colourfully decorated with polychrome speckles and bands, the scales finely detailed in gilt
11 in. (28 cm.) high

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Amelia Walker
Amelia Walker Director, Specialist Head of Private & Iconic Collections

Lot Essay

The fish is a symbol of fertility and abundance, and the entwined paired fish, a homophone for continuous abundance, has long been favoured as an auspicious symbol in Chinese decorative arts. It is also one of the Bajixiang, 'Eight Buddhist Emblems'. Ceramic vases in the shape of paired fish became popular among various kilns in China as early as the ninth century. See for example a Yue ware vase in the shape of two fish in the Percival David Foundation Collection illustrated by R. Scott, Imperial Taste: Chinese Ceramics from the Percival David Foundation, Los Angeles and San Francisco, 1989, pl. 1, where the author also points out that the paired fish became a popular motif on metalwork after the introduction of Tibetan Buddhism in the Yuan dynasty (1280-1368).
A comparable pair of Qianlong/Jiaqing period 'twin-fish' cloisonné enamel vases was sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 30 May 2012, lot 3922; another pair sold at Christie's Paris, 6 July 2022, lot 126.

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