A MAGNIFICENT IMPERIAL BEIJING ENAMEL WINE-POT AND COVER
A MAGNIFICENT IMPERIAL BEIJING ENAMEL WINE-POT AND COVER

細節
A MAGNIFICENT IMPERIAL BEIJING ENAMEL WINE-POT AND COVER
YONGZHENG FOUR-CHARACTER MARK AND OF THE PERIOD (1723-1735)

The pear-shaped body is elaborately enamelled in vivid tones with a frieze of colourful foliate medallions enclosing blue panels of classic scroll designs, interspersed by upright coxcomb springing from a band of pink lotus petals encircling the foot, all on a rich yellow-ground, the shoulder decorated with six cloud-shaped cartouches each enclosing a different coloured lotus spray, above a band of pink and green interlocking ruyi-heads with floral sprays on a black-ground, the spout similarly decorated and set at right angles to the ebony scroll handle, the hinged stepped domed cover encircled by floral bands on black and yellow grounds, the interior turquoise-enamelled, and the reign mark inscribed in aubergine enamel within a double-circle surrounded by a foliate meander
6 1/2 in. (16.5 cm.) high, box
出版
Sotheby's Hong Kong, Twenty Years, Hong Kong, 1993, pl. 418.
展覽
40th Anniversary Exhibition of the Min Chiu Society, In Pursuit of Antiquities, Hong Kong Museum of Art, 2001, Catalogue no. 203.

拍品專文

Previously sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 20 November 1984, lot 530.

The design and shape of this ewer is extremely rare. Only one other known wine-pot, the pair to the present lot, from the National Palace Museum, Taiwan, is illustrated in Enamel Ware in the Ming and Ch'ing Dynasties, Taiwan, 1999, pl. 100.

It is highly likely that the present lot takes its inspiration from a Western form. The Yongzheng emperor, following on from his predecessor Kangxi, was open to learning about Western advancements, particularly in the arts and sciences. The present lot is representative of Yongzheng's interest in the West and in the innovations which were brought from the West to China. Not only is the technique of enamelling on metal a relatively novel Western-style medium for use in the arts, but the form that the vessel has taken on is very likely from Europe, where it resembles the pots used to heat up drinking chocolate, a distinctly European beverage.

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