A REGENCY GILT-BRONZE-MOUNTED CHINESE PORCELAIN CORAL-GROUND VASE
A REGENCY GILT-BRONZE-MOUNTED CHINESE PORCELAIN CORAL-GROUND VASE
A REGENCY GILT-BRONZE-MOUNTED CHINESE PORCELAIN CORAL-GROUND VASE
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A REGENCY GILT-BRONZE-MOUNTED CHINESE PORCELAIN CORAL-GROUND VASE
5 More
A REGENCY GILT-BRONZE-MOUNTED CHINESE PORCELAIN CORAL-GROUND VASE

ATTRIBUTED TO VULLIAMY & CO, LONDON, THE VASE QING, LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY, THE MOUNTS CIRCA 1815

Details
A REGENCY GILT-BRONZE-MOUNTED CHINESE PORCELAIN CORAL-GROUND VASE
ATTRIBUTED TO VULLIAMY & CO, LONDON, THE VASE QING, LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY, THE MOUNTS CIRCA 1815
Of slender baluster form, the leaf-cast rim attaching to scrolled foliate handles cast with flowerheads, the body decorated with exotic birds within a bamboo landscape, the underside with printed paper label for 'CHAIT GALLERIES, NEW YORK'
20 ½ in. (52 cm.) high
Provenance
With Chait Galleries, New York.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, New York, 22 April 2009, lot 165.

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Lot Essay

This Chinese vase is mounted with voluted handles in the Grecian manner is inspired by the oeuvres of French bronziers such as Pierre-Phillippe Thomire (d.1843). This 'antique' fashion was further popularized by the connoisseur Thomas Hope with the publication of his Regency Furniture and Interior Decoration of 1807 and a similarly mounted vase is illustrated as plate XXXI.
The French 'antique' taste was favored by the Prince of Wales, later George IV, and the firm of Vulliamy headed by Benjamin Vulliamy (d.1811) and his son Benjamin Lewis Vulliamy (d1854) was employed, primarily as clockmakers, but also in the supply of decorative objects, many of which were provided through manufacturers and suppliers in France. This vase with its flattened ribbed devices at the base of the handles can be compared in treatment and design to similarly scalloped friezes on a pair of Chinese vases mounted by the Vulliamy firm for Carlton House and delivered in 1808 (Carlton House: The Past Glories of George IV's Palace, exhibition catalogue, The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace, 1991, p. 96, no. 48). There are also similarities in the scrolling treatment of the mounts to the celebrated Harewood vase, supplied by Vulliamy & Son to the Lascelles family, which was sold in these rooms 5 December 2012, lot 525 (£241,250, including premium).

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