A FINE AND RARE CELADON-GLAZED BOWL AND COVER
THE PROPERTY OF AN ASIAN GENTLEMAN
A FINE AND RARE CELADON-GLAZED BOWL AND COVER

Details
A FINE AND RARE CELADON-GLAZED BOWL AND COVER
QIANLONG PERIOD, JINGWEI TANG ZHI HALLMARKS WITHIN DOUBLE-SQUARES

The bowl is finely potted with rounded sides raised on a slightly tapered foot, covered inside and out with a rich green glaze except for the base with a transparent glaze, the rims of both bowl and cover with a brown wash, the cover similarly glazed celadon except for the interior of the finial inscribed with the reign mark and covered with a clear glaze
4 1/4 in. (10.8 cm.) diam., box

Lot Essay

Jingwei Tang, Hall of Reverent Awe, was the studio name of Li Hu, alias Duanren, style name Zhucun, a native of Cixi; see Yang Tingfu, Qingren Shiming Biecheng Zihao Suoyin, p. 1019. However, it has been suggested that porcelains bearing the Jingwei Tang zhi mark once belonged to the Manchu high official Agedunbu; see Wang Qingzheng (ed.), Jianming Taici Cidian, Shanghai, 1989, p. 225. Among the porcelain wares bearing this mark, it appears that a large majority were celadon-glazed with brown rims, as is the case with the present lot, and two other bowls in the Percival David Foundation, London, one which was included in the joint exhibition with the Victoria and Albert Museum, Rare Marks on Chinese Ceramics, London, 1998, illustrated in the Catalogue, no. 47.

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