Lot Essay
Vases of this form and decoration are extremely rare; this appears to be the only example known.
The current vase, with its crisply carved mark, can best be compared to another carved celadon jar from the Fonthill Heirlooms (no. 643) purchased from the Lord Loch of Drylaw, subsequently in the collection of Lord Margadale of Islay, formed by Alfred Morrison, sold in our London Rooms, 18 October 1971, lot 51, and later sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 17 May 1988, lot 75. Compare also to the elaborate vase illustrated by John Ayers, Chinese Ceramics in The Baur Collection, volume 2, Geneva, 1979, fig. 295 (no. A385), with a similar treatment of the wings of the bat, a very similar mark and the glaze of a related deep tone.
The current vase, with its crisply carved mark, can best be compared to another carved celadon jar from the Fonthill Heirlooms (no. 643) purchased from the Lord Loch of Drylaw, subsequently in the collection of Lord Margadale of Islay, formed by Alfred Morrison, sold in our London Rooms, 18 October 1971, lot 51, and later sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 17 May 1988, lot 75. Compare also to the elaborate vase illustrated by John Ayers, Chinese Ceramics in The Baur Collection, volume 2, Geneva, 1979, fig. 295 (no. A385), with a similar treatment of the wings of the bat, a very similar mark and the glaze of a related deep tone.