A SET OF THREE SPINACH-GREEN JADE SEALS
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE LATE GERARD ARNHOLD
A SET OF THREE SPINACH-GREEN JADE SEALS

LATE QING DYNASTY

细节
A SET OF THREE SPINACH-GREEN JADE SEALS
LATE QING DYNASTY
Each seal is finely carved with a forward-facing, crouching dragon guarding a flaming pearl amidst clouds. The seal faces reads Yichuntang (Hall of Ever-present Spring), bi er jian gu (may you have blessings and wealth), and wei chun zhi qi (blessings from Spring) respectively. The stone is of mottled green color with some black inclusions.
The two square seals 2 3/8 in. (6 cm.) high; the rectangular seal 2 ¼ in. (5.7 cm.) high
来源
John Sparks Ltd., London.
The Gerard Arnhold (1918-2010) Collection, São Paolo.
拍场告示
謹請注意,本拍品斷代應為 晚清

拍品专文

Sets of three seals, such as the present set, carved from the same material and in a similar style, with one bearing the name of a palace or a hall, and the other two carved with phrases taken from classical works or poems, were popular at the Qing imperial court.

Yichuntang, which is carved on the face of the smallest seal in the present set, is the name of the hall where Prince Qing, Yikuang 奕劻(1838-1917) lived in his residential compound 慶王府 in Beijing. Yikuang’s grandfather, Yonglin 永璘, was the seventeenth son of Emperor Qianlong, and the first in line in the Prince Qing peerage. Yikuang served many posts at the Court, including the first Prime Minister of the Imperial Cabinet 內閣總理大臣, before the fall of Qing dynasty in the same year.

更多来自 温其如玉:私人珍藏中国玉雕

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