A RARE MOTHER-OF-PEARL INLAID INGOT-SHAPED BOX AND COVER
A RARE MOTHER-OF-PEARL INLAID INGOT-SHAPED BOX AND COVER
1 More
A RARE MOTHER-OF-PEARL INLAID INGOT-SHAPED BOX AND COVER

QIANLONG FOUR-CHARACTER SHELL-INLAID MARK AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)

Details
A RARE MOTHER-OF-PEARL INLAID INGOT-SHAPED BOX AND COVER
QIANLONG FOUR-CHARACTER SHELL-INLAID MARK AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)
The finely inlaid cover with a landscape scene in which a peacock perched in a pine tree growing from jagged rockwork looks down at a dragonfly in flight beside large sprays of iris in the foreground, the rim of the box and cover both inlaid with a continuous diaper band, the interior of the box with a cluster of lingzhi, the interior of the cover inlaid with a design of three symbols likely representing rhinoceros horns
2 1/2 in. (6.4 cm.) long, box
Provenance
Previously sold at Christie's London, 4 December 1995, lot 340

Brought to you by

Aster Ng
Aster Ng

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

Qianlong-marked examples of lac burgaute wares are exceedingly rare. It is rare to find reign marks on mother-of-pearl inlaid boxes although some examples can be found with a maker's mark of Qian Li, denoting Jian Qianli, who specialised in inlaid lacquer and was known to have been active during the early Qing dynasty. Another Qianlong-marked mother-of-pearl inlaid box and cover of quatre-lobed form was sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 7 July (catalogue dated 28 April) 2003, lot 536; and a Qianlong-marked ruyi-shaped box was sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 1 June 2011, lot 3579.

The unusual form of this box and cover is based on a silver ingot, a tradable currency during the Ming and Qing periods. Its shape may have its origin in early lacquer wares. See Hai-Wai Yi-Zhen: Chinese Art in Overseas Collections: Lacquerware, National Palace Museum, Taiwan, 1987, p. 39, no. 39, for a Song dynasty example of similar form but decorated with a lotus scroll.

More from Important Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art

View All
View All