拍品專文
A slightly smaller ge-type glazed vase of this shape was sold in these Rooms, 29 April 2002, lot 664.
Compare two other Qianlong vases of the same form but covered in teadust glazes, the first in the Tokyo National Museum, illustrated in Oriental Ceramics, vol. 1, Kodansha Series, Japan, 1982, no. 293; and the other illustrated by J. Ayers, Chinese Ceramics in the Baur Collection, Vol 2, Geneva, 1999, pl. 296, where the author states that the form apparently derives from that of an archaic bronze yu, which is equipped with an overhead swing handle. Cf. also a ru-type glazed vase of this form sold in these Rooms, 1 November 2004, lot 804.
Compare two other Qianlong vases of the same form but covered in teadust glazes, the first in the Tokyo National Museum, illustrated in Oriental Ceramics, vol. 1, Kodansha Series, Japan, 1982, no. 293; and the other illustrated by J. Ayers, Chinese Ceramics in the Baur Collection, Vol 2, Geneva, 1999, pl. 296, where the author states that the form apparently derives from that of an archaic bronze yu, which is equipped with an overhead swing handle. Cf. also a ru-type glazed vase of this form sold in these Rooms, 1 November 2004, lot 804.