Important Chinese Art

Important Chinese Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 741. A flambé-glazed handled vase, Seal mark and period of Qianlong | 清乾隆 窰變釉雙耳瓶 《大清乾隆年製》款.

A flambé-glazed handled vase, Seal mark and period of Qianlong | 清乾隆 窰變釉雙耳瓶 《大清乾隆年製》款

Auction Closed

March 22, 08:01 PM GMT

Estimate

60,000 - 80,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

A flambé-glazed handled vase

Seal mark and period of Qianlong

清乾隆 窰變釉雙耳瓶 《大清乾隆年製》款


the base incised with a six-character seal mark, Japanese wood box (3) 


Height 8½ in., 21.7 cm 

Tanisho, Kanazawa (by repute).


谷庄,金沢(傳)

Flambé glazes derive from the Jun wares of the Song dynasty, a glaze that was first revived during the Yongzheng period and remained popular throughout the Qing dynasty.

Compare a flambé-glazed vase of this type, in the Capital Museum, Beijing, illustrated in Xiong Liao, Beauty of Ceramics. Gems of the Official Kilns, Taipei, 1993, pl. 147; and another included in the exhibition Collection of Chinese and Other Far Eastern Art Assembled by Yamanaka & Company, Inc., Yamanaka & Company, Inc., New York, 1943, no. 915. See a further example from the Marie Theresa L. Virata Collection, sold at Christie's New York, 16th March 2017, lot 614; and another from the Hosokawa clan, sold in these rooms, 8th October 2014, lot 3111. For a Yongzheng prototype of this vase, see one sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 21st September 2004, lot 316.