£37,700
Fine Asian & Islamic Works of Art | 733
Auction: 16 May 2023 at 11:00 BST
清嘉慶款及年代 茶葉末地描金纏枝蓮紋荸薺瓶
the compressed globular body resting on a slightly waisted ring foot, rising to a long cylindrical neck, finely painted in gilt with scrolling tendrils with lotus flowers within a ruyi band under the mouth and a lappets band above the foot, all against an even tea-dust-glazed ground, the base inscribed with a six-character Jiaqing mark in gilt
Provenance: Formerly in a private European collection, bought in Australia
Note: Tea-dust-glazed bottle vases are well-known, most notably made in the Qianlong period. Compare to a similar vase in shape but broader cylindrical neck, Qianlong mark and period, in the collection of the British Museum, accession no. 735-1883.
Tea-dust-glazed wares with additional silver, gilt, or enamel decoration are rare. Compare to a hexagonal vase with tea-dust-glazed and gilt decoration, dated to the Qing dynasty, 1720-1820, in the British Museum, museum no. Franks.57; See another rare gilt-decorated tea-dust-glazed double-gourd handled vase, Qianlong mark and of the period, was sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 28 Nov 2005, lot 1311.