A VERY RARE FAHUA-STYLE JAR
A VERY RARE FAHUA-STYLE JAR
A VERY RARE FAHUA-STYLE JAR
A VERY RARE FAHUA-STYLE JAR
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A VERY RARE FAHUA-STYLE JAR

QIANLONG PERIOD (1736-1795)

Details
A VERY RARE FAHUA-STYLE JAR
QIANLONG PERIOD (1736-1795)
13 5⁄8 in. (34.4 cm.) high
Provenance
Jane Stanton Hitchcock (1946-2025) Collection, Washington, D.C.

Brought to you by

Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安) Head of Sale, AVP, Specialist

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Lot Essay

This lavishly decorated jar embodies the Qianlong Emperor’s admiration for Ming-dynasty fahua porcelains. The fahua technique employs raised lines to provide outlines and color divisions on ceramics decorated with colored glazes. The technique was often combined with either a cobalt blue or a turquoise ground.

In the eighteenth century, the raised designs become very delicate and precise. On the present jar, the decorative beaded bands and lower border of crashing waves create a broad expanse for the tranquil scene of white egrets in a lotus pond, all set against a rich mottled blue ground. A virtually identical jar with a cover is in the Matsuoko Museum of Art, Tokyo. (Fig. 1) A Qianlong mark-and-period fahua-style covered jar of different shape, but with very similar decoration, is in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, and illustrated in Catalog of the Special Exhibition of K’ang-hsi, Yung-cheng and Ch’ien-lung Porcelain from the Ch’ing Dynasty in the National Palace Musuem, Taipei, 1986, no. 81. See, also, the Qianlong mark-and-period fahua-style covered jar from the Wang Xing Lou Collection with a virtually identical lotus pond scene, but rendered in turquoise and famille rose enamels with gilt highlights against a sapphire-blue ground, sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 30 May 2022, lot 2722. (Fig. 2)

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