A SMALL IVORY-GLAZED INCENSE STICK HOLDER
A SMALL IVORY-GLAZED INCENSE STICK HOLDER

YONGZHENG SIX-CHARACTER INCISED SEAL MARK AND PROBABLY OF THE PERIOD

细节
A SMALL IVORY-GLAZED INCENSE STICK HOLDER
YONGZHENG SIX-CHARACTER INCISED SEAL MARK AND PROBABLY OF THE PERIOD
Finely potted with a compressed pear-shaped body, the vessel is pierced on the wide and slightly domed top with three circular apertures, and is covered overall with an even glaze of warm ivory tone.
2 7/8 in. (7.3 cm.) high

荣誉呈献

Nick Wilson
Nick Wilson

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拍品专文

A similar white or ivory-glazed vessel, also with incised Yongzheng mark, is illustrated in Qingdai yuyao ciqi, Vol. I, Part 2, Beijing, 2005, pp. 212-3, no. 92. Compare to another Yongzheng-marked vessel of similar form covered in a robin's-egg-blue glaze in the Beijing Palace Museum Collection, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum - 37 - Monochrome Porcelain, Hong Kong, 1999, no. 187. See, also, an aubergine-glazed example illustrated in Imperial Perfection; The Palace Porcelain of Three Chinese Emperors: The Wang Xing Lou Collection, Hong Kong, 2004, no. 95, which is incised with a Qianlong seal mark. Also illustrated, no. 74, is a celadon-glazed example with carved decoration, bearing a Qianlong seal mark in underglaze blue, where it is suggested that vessels of this type may have been used to hold not only incense sticks but flowers,

The inspiration for the shape of these vessels may have been small glazed pottery vessels of earlier Tang dynasty (AD 618-907) date, such as the white ware example with cover, illustrated by W. Watson, Tang and Liao Ceramics, New York, 1984, p. 38, no. 14., where the author notes that the slightly greenish tint of the clear glaze on the white body gives the appearance of a cream color.

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