A SEMI-TRANSLUCENT WHITE GLASS OVOID VASE
PROPERTY FROM THE BARNEY AND EMMA DAGAN COLLECTION
A SEMI-TRANSLUCENT WHITE GLASS OVOID VASE

细节
A SEMI-TRANSLUCENT WHITE GLASS OVOID VASE
The tapered body is delicately carved in low relief with two shaped panels bordered by intertwined chrysanthemum stems, each enclosing a long inscription.
4½ in. (11.4 cm.) tall
来源
Nagatani, Chicago, 1972.
Barney and Emma Dagan Collection, Los Angeles, California.
出版
C.F. Shangraw and C. Brown,A Chorus of Colors: Chinese Glass from Three American Collections, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 1995, p. 89, no. 60.
展览
Asian Art Museum of San Francisco,A Chorus of Colors: Chinese Glass from Three American Collections, 5 December 1995 - 25 February 1996, no. 60.

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拍品专文

The inscription is a poem written by the Qianlong Emperor entitled Yixi, which may be translated as 'Remembering the Past'. In the poem, the emperor laments his youth, a time when he could easily master archery as well as writing standard script in very small characters. In his old age, he could no longer handle a bow and arrow properly because his arms became weak, neither could he write neatly anymore because of his blurred vision. Most of the court officials who have served him in the past passed away, only a few who were still around could attest to what he was able to accomplish in his youth, which made his remembering the past feel like boasting.

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