A RARE COPPER-RED AND UNDERGLAZE-BLUE DECORATED DRAGON PILGRIM'S FLASK
A RARE COPPER-RED AND UNDERGLAZE-BLUE DECORATED DRAGON PILGRIM'S FLASK

Details
A RARE COPPER-RED AND UNDERGLAZE-BLUE DECORATED DRAGON PILGRIM'S FLASK
QIANLONG SIX-CHARACTER SEAL MARK AND OF THE PERIOD

Well painted on each circular face in copper-red of attractive mushroom-pink tone with a full-frontal sinuous dragon with eyes picked out in blue, coiled around a flaming pearl and leaping above cresting waves, against a ground scattered with stylised cloud-scrolls, the cylindrical neck with two clouds flanked by a pair of curved handles, rim frit
12 7/8 in. (32.7 cm.) high
Provenance
It is believed that this flask with 'fleur-de-peche dragons on a white ground' was from the Collection formed by Captain C. Oswald Liddell acquired during his residence in China between 1877 and 1913. It was later exhibited at Messrs. Bluett & Sons, London, no. 207 (not illustrated) and is also believed to have been subsequently in the Mount Trust Collection.
Sale room notice
Please note that the mark illustrated here is incorrect. The correct mark for this lot is illustrated beneath the text for lot 566.

Lot Essay

Previously sold in London, 6 April 1976, lot 137, and again in Hong Kong, 3 May 1994, lot 191.

This type of flask is also known as magua ping (flask to be tied to a horse). It is recorded in the Yangxindian Zaobanchu gezuo huoji Qing dang (Qing dynasty archives relating to the crafts produced by the various Imperial Household Workshops of the Yangxindian), No. 3396, that in 1742, the court official Hai Wang received an order to "make a few drawings of this magua ping with underglaze-red dragons and underglaze-blue clouds over a white ground, to be passed on to Tang Ying in Jiangxi for several pieces to be fired according to them". The present vessel may have been among these recorded flasks.

Compare the present lot with other flasks with similar decoration and of approximately the same size, one from the Reitlinger Collection, illustrated by S. Jenyns, Later Chinese Porcelain, 1971, pl. XCIV, fig. 1; one from the Walters Collection, illustrated by S. Bushell, Oriental Ceramic Art, fig. 176; a slightly smaller one from the Art Gallery of New South Wales, included in the Exhibition of Chinese Ceramics, 1965, Catalogue, no. 116; and a larger flask is illustrated in The Tsui Museum of Art, Chinese Ceramics IV, Hong Kong, 1995, pl. 84.

More from THE IMPERIAL SALE

View All
View All