AN IMPERIAL LARGE PALE CELADON JADE ‘ELEPHANT-HEAD’ VASE AND COVER
AN IMPERIAL LARGE PALE CELADON JADE ‘ELEPHANT-HEAD’ VASE AND COVER
AN IMPERIAL LARGE PALE CELADON JADE ‘ELEPHANT-HEAD’ VASE AND COVER
AN IMPERIAL LARGE PALE CELADON JADE ‘ELEPHANT-HEAD’ VASE AND COVER
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PROPERTY FROM THE SPRINGFIELD MUSEUMS, SOLD TO SUPPORT ART ACQUISITIONS AND COLLECTIONS CARE
AN IMPERIAL LARGE PALE CELADON JADE ‘ELEPHANT-HEAD’ VASE AND COVER

QIANLONG INCISED SIX-CHARACTER FANGGU MARK IN A LINE AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)

Details
AN IMPERIAL LARGE PALE CELADON JADE ‘ELEPHANT-HEAD’ VASE AND COVER
QIANLONG INCISED SIX-CHARACTER FANGGU MARK IN A LINE AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)
The vase is carved in relief on each broad side with a pair of archaistic kui phoenix and a band of upright petals above the foot, the neck flanked by a pair of elephant heads with loose ring handles, the side of the foot incised with a Qianlong fanggu mark in a horizontal line. The cover is surmounted by a finial in the form of a elephant standing foursquare above clouds. The stone is of an even, greenish-white tone.
12 13/16 in. (32.5 cm.) overall height
Provenance
H.A. Lanthier, New York, 23 December 1910
George Walter Vincent Smith (1832-1923), Springfield, Massachusetts

Lot Essay

George Walter Vincent Smith acquired this piece, together with lot 2902, in 1910 from H.A. Lanthier, a dealer specialising in rare oil paintings, curiosities and works of art based in Madison Square, New York.

A majority of the jades made during the Qianlong reign were in imitation of archaic ritual bronzes of the Shang, Zhou and Han dynasties, as the Qianlong Emperor had a deep interest in Chinese antiquities. Some of these jade examples were more faithfully copied, whilst others were slightly modified to suit prevailing taste of the Qing court. The petals and elephant heads on the present vase, for example, are more likely Qing adaptations to provide auspicious meanings to the vase. For instance, the combination of an elephant and a vase conveys the rebus taiping youxiang, ‘Peaceful times’ or ‘When there is peace, there are signs’. Compare a yellow jade vase and cover carved with archaistic scrolls and similar elephant-head handles, also dating to the Qianlong period, sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 30 May 2012, lot 3956.

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