A PAIR OF FINE WHITE JADE BOWLS
A PAIR OF FINE WHITE JADE BOWLS

18TH/19TH CENTURY

Details
A PAIR OF FINE WHITE JADE BOWLS
18TH/19TH CENTURY
Each with well-carved, deep rounded sides rising from a thick ring foot and flaring slightly beneath the neatly beveled rim, the smoothly polished translucent stone of very pale greenish-white color
5¾ in. (14.6 cm.) diam., stands (2)

Lot Essay

Compare the 18th century white jade bowl illustrated by M. Knight et. al., in Later Chinese Jades: Ming Dynasty to Early Twentieth Century, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 2007, p. 129, no. 113, where the authors note that the thin walls of the vessel highlight the translucency of the material and the purity of its color, two characteristics shared with its porcelain prototypes. See, also, a similar greenish-white jade bowl dated to the 18th century in the Museum of East Asian Art, Bath, illustrated by A. Forsyth and B. McElney in Jades from China, The Museum of East Asian Art, 1994, p. 405, no. 340.

Two pairs of white jade bowls were sold in our Hong Kong rooms. The first pair, dated to the Qianlong period, with similar, slightly everted edge and of closely related size, was sold 30 October 2000, lot 651; and the second pair of slightly larger size, sold 26 April 2004, lot 1116.

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