VASE COUVERT EN JADE BEIGE À DEUX ANSES EN FORME DE TÊTE D'ÉLÉPHANT
VASE COUVERT EN JADE BEIGE À DEUX ANSES EN FORME DE TÊTE D'ÉLÉPHANT
VASE COUVERT EN JADE BEIGE À DEUX ANSES EN FORME DE TÊTE D'ÉLÉPHANT
1 更多
VASE COUVERT EN JADE BEIGE À DEUX ANSES EN FORME DE TÊTE D'ÉLÉPHANT
4 更多
十七/十八世紀 青玉帶皮象耳仿古蓋瓶

CHINE, XVIIÈME-XVIIIÈME SIÈCLE

細節
十七/十八世紀 青玉帶皮象耳仿古蓋瓶
Hauteur : 10,2 cm. (4 in.)
來源
Philip Cardeiro先生舊藏
倫敦古董商Knapton Rasti Asian art, 2009年11月
更多詳情
A MOTTLED BEIGE JADE ELEPHANT-HANDLED VASE AND COVER
CHINA, 17TH-18TH CENTURY

榮譽呈獻

Tiphaine Nicoul
Tiphaine Nicoul Head of department

拍品專文

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 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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