A PAIR OF CHINESE VERY RARE LARGE CLOISONNÉ ENAMEL 'TIBETAN-STYLE' EWERS (DUOMUHU)
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 2… 顯示更多 Property from a Prestigious Swiss Collection (lots 66, 207-252)
A PAIR OF CHINESE VERY RARE LARGE CLOISONNÉ ENAMEL 'TIBETAN-STYLE' EWERS (DUOMUHU)

KANGXI PERIOD (1662-1722)

細節
A PAIR OF CHINESE VERY RARE LARGE CLOISONNÉ ENAMEL 'TIBETAN-STYLE' EWERS (DUOMUHU)
KANGXI PERIOD (1662-1722)
Each with cylindrical body and 'monk's-cap' rim divided into four sections by horizontal raised gilt bands, each section being decorated with pairs of dragons confronted around a flaming pearl above waves, all on a turquoise ground, the serpentine dragon handles decorated with red scales and finely-cast gilt-bronze dragon heads at the tops, the spouts emerging from gilt-bronze dragon-masks
24 in. (61 cm.) high (2)
來源
Purchased by the grandfather of the present owner, probably in the 1930s from a European dealer, or possibly from an auction house.
注意事項
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 20% on the buyer's premium.

榮譽呈獻

Christiaan van Rechteren
Christiaan van Rechteren

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拍品專文

The duomuhu shape is derived from a Tibetan prototype, the bey lep (which translates to container for butter) but they were also used for storing milk tea in Lamaist monasteries, as well as wine. It has a long history in China beginning in the Yuan dynasty (1279-1368), but the columnar form, as in the present lot, does not appear to have been favoured during the Ming dynasty (1368-1644). However, renewed interest in Tibet and Tibetan Buddhism took place during the early Qing dynasty by the Emperor Kangxi (1662-1722) and vessels of this form started to appear in both metalwork (in particular cloisonné enamel), porcelain and glazed biscuit ware. Both the metal and porcelain duomu ewers continued to be produced during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor (1736-1795), who also had a keen interest in Tibetan Buddhism, and these were in many cases made in the Imperial workshops.

Cloisonné enamel ewers of this form dating to the Kangxi period are extremely rare, and to find a pair of such ewers appears even more so. Two almost identical single ewers are published: one is in The Pierre Uldry Collection, illustrated by Helmut Brinker and Albert Lutz, Chinese Cloisonné, The Pierre Uldry Collection, New York, 1989, no. 159; and the other, in the George Walter Vincent Smith Collection and Museum, Springfield, Massachusetts, was exhibited Style and Symbol: Chinese Cloisonné from the Permanent Collection, George Walter Vincent Smith Art Museum, Springfield, Mass., 2000-2001, and also Cloisonné: Chinese Enamels from the Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties, The Bard Graduate Center, New York, 26 January - 17 April 2011, catalogue no. 90.

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