A PAIR OF SHELL TUREENS AND COVERS
A PAIR OF SHELL TUREENS AND COVERS

QIANLONG PERIOD

Details
A PAIR OF SHELL TUREENS AND COVERS
QIANLONG PERIOD
Each formed as a ridged conch shell raised on three short feet with carved and molded detail, the shell "opening" glazed white and serving as a semicircular handle to the cover, the whole in washy iron-red with gilt markings, the interior rims turquoise and the interiors white
7½ in. (19 cm.) wide (4)

Lot Essay

Shell forms are known in Chinese ceramics as early as the Tang dynasty, when three-color glazed pottery conch shell brushwashers were made. The conch shell is of course familiar as a decorative motif throughout Chinese art, being one of Buddhism's eight precious symbols. As a vessel capable of making sound, it symbolized the strength of the Buddha's teachings. In the 18th century this tradition continued with the making of shell brushwashers, particularly robin's egg-glazed. In the present example, it seems to have merged with the European notion of animal-form tureens.

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