VERSEUSE TÉTRAPODE COUVERTE EN PORCELAINE BLEU BLANC À DÉCOR DES EMBLÈMES DU BAJIXIANG, HE
VERSEUSE TÉTRAPODE COUVERTE EN PORCELAINE BLEU BLANC À DÉCOR DES EMBLÈMES DU BAJIXIANG, HE
VERSEUSE TÉTRAPODE COUVERTE EN PORCELAINE BLEU BLANC À DÉCOR DES EMBLÈMES DU BAJIXIANG, HE
2 More
VERSEUSE TÉTRAPODE COUVERTE EN PORCELAINE BLEU BLANC À DÉCOR DES EMBLÈMES DU BAJIXIANG, HE
5 More
Property from a French Private Collection
VERSEUSE TÉTRAPODE COUVERTE EN PORCELAINE BLEU BLANC À DÉCOR DES EMBLÈMES DU BAJIXIANG, HE

CHINE, DYNASTIE QING, XIXE SIÈCLE

Details
VERSEUSE TÉTRAPODE COUVERTE EN PORCELAINE BLEU BLANC À DÉCOR DES EMBLÈMES DU BAJIXIANG, HE
CHINE, DYNASTIE QING, XIXE SIÈCLE
La base avec une marque Qianlong apocryphe.
Longueur : 24,5 cm. (9 5⁄8 in.)
Provenance
Acquired in Asia in the 1950s, thence by descent in the family.
Further details
A BLUE AND WHITE 'BAJIXIANG' TETRAPOD EWER AND COVER, HE
CHINA, QING DYNASTY, 19TH CENTURY, APOCRYPHAL QIANLONG MARK

Brought to you by

Tiphaine Nicoul
Tiphaine Nicoul Head of department

Lot Essay

The present vessel is a finely conceived interpretation of the archaic bronze he, a ritual pouring vessel associated with the Shang and Zhou dynasties. Originally used for mixing and serving wine during ceremonial rites, the form enjoyed renewed popularity from the Song dynasty onward, when antiquarian taste inspired the reinterpretation of ancient bronzes in porcelain and other media. Rather than directly copying early prototypes, Qing artisans sought to capture the aesthetic spirit and ritual character of archaic forms through refined reinterpretation.
Comparable examples of this form in porcelain are preserved in major collections, including a Qianlong marked example in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, illustrated in the Special Exhibition of K’ang-hsi, Yung-cheng and Ch’ien-lung Wares, 1986, no. 71; another from the Tianjin Art Museum exhibited in Imperial China: The Living Past, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1992, no. 94; and a related example from the Norbulingka Palace, Lhasa, illustrated in Gems of China’s Cultural Relics, Beijing, 1992, no. 46. A Daoguang marked example of the same design from the Simon Kwan Collection was included in the exhibition Imperial Porcelain of Late Qing, Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1983, no. 5. See a related blue and white he bearing a Daoguang mark and dated to the 19th century, sold at Christie’s New York, 17 September 2010, lot 1426.

More from Art d'Asie

View All
View All