ANOTHER PROPERTY
A RARE PAIR OF FAMILLE ROSE GREEN-GROUND VASES

Details
A RARE PAIR OF FAMILLE ROSE GREEN-GROUND VASES
IRON-RED QIANLONG SEAL MARKS AND OF THE PERIOD

Each globular body enamelled with a foliate lotus scroll suspending iron-red bats reserved on a lime-green ground, between lotus petals above the foot and ruyi-heads around the shoulder below a moulded band with descending bats divided by scrolling clouds repeated around the foot, the broad waisted neck with stylized upright plantain leaves and applied with two iron-red and gilt ruyi-handles each suspending wan emblems and ribbons, a band of ruyi-heads and trefoils below the iron-red and gilt flaring mouth, the interior and base turquoise-glazed (small areas of restoration to handles)
14 3/4 in. (37.4 cm.) high, boxes (2)
Provenance
Fonthill House, Tisbury, Wiltshire, no. 432, sold in our London Rooms, 18 October 1971, lot 88.
J.T. Tai.

Lot Essay

Previously sold in these Rooms, 20 March 1990, lot 679.

The Fonthill Heirlooms Collection was formed by Alfred Morrison during the Nineteenth Century. It included a large quantity of porcelain purchased from Lord Loch of Drylaw brought back to Britain after the sacking of the Yuanmingyuan in 1860.

It is noteworthy that where Qianlong-period famille rose coloured-ground vases occur, they are made with fancy handles, this is especially recurrent in the case of lime green and the present example is one of the most elaborate manifestations. For other examples, cf. a vase sold in these Rooms, 1 May 1995, lot 673, with bat handles suspending lingzhi sprigs; a vase with elephant-head handles sold in these Rooms, 30 October 1995, lot 757; and a vase offered in Hong Kong, 28 April 1992, lot 186, with 'gate-lintel' handles. Similarly, the shapes of the vases themselves are usually eccentric, belonging to the more flamboyant group of Qianlong wares which owe little to tradition but demonstrate contemporary taste.

(US$70,000-80,000)

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