A BLUE AND WHITE OGEE DISH
ANOTHER PROPERTY
清乾隆 青花八吉祥壽山福海折腰盌 六字篆書款

QIANLONG SIX-CHARACTER SEAL MARK AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)

細節
清乾隆 青花八吉祥壽山福海折腰盌 六字篆書款

此器源自瑞典著名牙醫兼藝術收藏家Erik Akerlund(生於1871年)。
來源
Formerly in the collection of Erik Akerlund (b. 1871) who was a well-known Swedish dentist and art collector

榮譽呈獻

Angela Kung
Angela Kung

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拍品專文

The ogee-dish form first appeared in the Qianlong period, with its production continuing into subsequent reigns of the Qing dynasty. The cobalt-blue designs on the present lot is painted in the Ming style of heaping and piling, combining Bajixiang, the Eight Buddhist Emblems, bats and sea waves, and the Eight Treasures, a comprehensive representation of good fortune, happiness and longevity. There are few published examples with this very rare combination of auspicious designs. The Bajixiang designs are more commonly found in doucai on Qianlong-marked ogee dishes, including one of similar size featuring the Buddhist emblems, with floral and ruyi borders on the exterior, in the Nanjing Museum, illustrated in Treasures in the Royalty: The Official Kiln Porcelain of the Chinese Qing Dynasty, Shanghai, 2003, pl. 302.

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