A CARVED AND ENAMELED WHITE GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE
A CARVED AND ENAMELED WHITE GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE
A CARVED AND ENAMELED WHITE GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE
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A CARVED AND ENAMELED WHITE GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE

IMPERIAL, PALACE WORKSHOPS, BEIJING, 1775-1799

Details
A CARVED AND ENAMELED WHITE GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE
IMPERIAL, PALACE WORKSHOPS, BEIJING, 1775-1799
The flattened bottle is carved and enameled around the sides as a wicker basket filled with various flowers, the handle looped over one of the narrow sides. The three-character mark, Guyue Xuan (Ancient Moon Pavilion), is on the oval base.
2 3/8 in. (6 cm.) high, stopper
Provenance
Nagatani, Inc., Chicago, 1 October 1948.
Stephen Junkunc, III (d. 1978) Collection.

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Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
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Lot Essay


In 1767, the Jian Yuan was completed in the Changchun Yuan complex (a series of Imperial gardens to the West of Beijing adjoining the Yuanming Yuan, known collectively as the Summer Palace). One of the halls within the Jian Yuan was the Guyue xuan (Ancient Moon Pavilion). The Changchun Yuan was intended as a retirement home for the Qianlong Emperor, although he never took up full-time residence there. The Guyue xuan was completed in 1767, prompting the Emperor to order a group of wares, mostly enamels on glass, bearing the name of that particular pavilion.
Compare the Guyue xuan-marked white glass bottle enameled with a similar continuous design of a wicker basket of flowers, but lacking the relief carving and featuring decorative borders around the neck, from the J & J Collection, illustrated by H. Moss, V. Graham and K. B. Tsang, The Art of the Chinese Snuff Bottle, vol. I, New York, 1993, pp. 342-5, no. 200, and the relief-carved example with similar design, but bearing a yuzhi (by imperial command) mark and with decorative band around the neck, illustrated by H. Moss, V. Graham and K. B. Tsang, A Treasury of Chinese Snuff Bottles, The Mary and George Bloch Collection, vol. 6, part 1, Arts of the Figure, Hong Kong, 2008, pp. 226-7, no. 1105.

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