A RARE CLOISONNÉ ENAMEL SNUFF BOTTLE
This lot is offered without reserve.
A RARE CLOISONNÉ ENAMEL SNUFF BOTTLE

PROBABLY IMPERIAL, 1760-1830

Details
A RARE CLOISONNÉ ENAMEL SNUFF BOTTLE
PROBABLY IMPERIAL, 1760-1830
The bottle is decorated on both sides with an orange carp on top of a brightly colored lotus pad and beneath the sun. The narrow sides are decorated with a repetitive cash pattern.
2 3/8 in. (6 cm.) high, shell stopper
Provenance
Robert Hall, London, 2009.
Ruth and Carl Barron Collection, Belmont, Massachusetts, no. 4932.
Special notice
This lot is offered without reserve.

Lot Essay

This type of cloisonné enamel snuff bottle has thin strips of wire soldered onto the copper or bronze body, creating separate channels called cloisons, which are then filled with different-colored enamels and fired in a kiln at low temperatures for a short period of time. In the case of this example, however, only some areas were infilled, providing a design in relief against the gilded ground. A magnificent double vase decorated in this technique, dated to 1786, is in the Uldry Collection (see H. Brinker and A. Lutz, Chinese Cloisonné. The Pierre Uldry Collection, no. 304). Another snuff bottle of the group, from the Meriem Collection, was sold in these rooms, 19 September 2007, lot 645. See, also, one illustrated in Chinese Snuff Bottles in the Seattle Art Museum, pl. 55, lower left; one in the collection of the Marquess of Exeter with its original stopper, illustrated by H. Moss, Chinese Snuff Bottles No. 6, E. 30; one with original stopper illustrated by L. Perry, Chinese Snuff Bottles. The Adventures & Studies of a Collector, no. 162; one in the Denis Low Collection, illustrated by R. Kleiner, Treasures from the Sanctum of Enlightened Respect, p. 212, no. 229; and another by M. Hughes, The Blair Bequest. Chinese Snuff Bottles from the Princeton University Art Museum, no. 339. One more extremely rare version of this design is illustrated by L. Souksi in the exhibition catalogue Merveilles de la Miniature Chinoise. Flacons-Tabatières de Chine de la Collection du Commandeur, Paris, 2000, no. 2.

More from The Ruth and Carl Barron Collection of Fine Chinese Snuff Bottles: Part IV

View All
View All