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Unidentified Artist Chinese, active mid-13th century, Chan master riding a mule, before 1249, Southern Song dynasty (1127–1279)

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Unidentified Artist Chinese, active mid-13th century, Chan master riding a mule南宋 佚名 騎驢圖 軸, before 1249, Southern Song dynasty (1127–1279). Hanging scroll; ink on paper. Image: 25 1/4 in. × 13 in. (64.1 × 33 cm) Overall with mounting: 58 1/4 × 13 1/2 in. (148 × 34.3 cm) Overall with knobs: 58 1/4 × 15 1/4 in. (148 × 38.7 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Bequest of John M. Crawford Jr., 1988 (1989.363.24) © 2000–2016 The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Painted in a few swift brushstrokes and deftly applied ink washes, Chan Master Riding a Mule exemplifies the freely expressive manner of Chan (Zen, in Japanese) Buddhist painting, which relies less on descriptive detail than on the capturing of spiritual concentration within the artist to achieve a vivid depiction. Inscribed by the noted Chan master Wuzhun, to whom it traditionally has been attributed, the painting is probably the work of a contemporary Chan artist following the sketchy brush style of Liang Kai (active first half of the thirteenth century). 

Wuzhun, well known for his wisdom as well as for his eccentric behavior, inscribed this painting while he was living at the Qingshansi, a Chan temple near Hangzhou, where he settled after he was rewarded by Emperor Lizong (r. 1225–1264) following an imperial audience. The rider's facial features-prominent forehead, mustache, and wispy beard-are not unlike those of Wuzhun himself, whose formal portrait, with an inscription by him dated 1238, is now in the Tofuku-ji temple in Kyoto. His laconic inscription may also be a self-deprecatory reference to himself: 

As rain darkens the mountain,
One mistakes a mule for a horse.

This work is exhibited in the "Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from the Metropolitan Collection" exhibition, on view through October 11th, 2016. 


Virgin and Child Enthroned, Pungau-Salzkammergut, ca. 1390-1410

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Virgin and Child Enthroned, Pungau-Salzkammergut, ca. 1390-1410. Photo Hampel

Height: 104 cm. Length of base panel: 60 cm. Lot 91. Estimation: € 18.000 - 22.000

Remains of pastel-coloured polychromy visible. The figural group has been hollowed out at the back and is on the original base panel. Christ child’s right hand missing. The Virgin’s left hand with hole for missing sceptre and remains of a crown on her head.

Hampel30 juin 2016

Attributed to Zhiweng, Meeting between Yaoshan and Li Ao, before 1256, Song dynasty (960–1279)

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Attributed to Zhiweng (Chinese, active first half of the 13th century), Meeting between Yaoshan and Li Ao 南宋 傳直翁 藥山李翱問道圖 軸, before 1256, Song dynasty (960–1279). Horizontal painting mounted as a hanging scroll; ink on paper. Image: 12 1/2 x 33 1/4 in. (31.8 x 84.5 cm) Overall with mounting: 49 1/8 x 34 in. (124.8 x 86.4 cm) Overall with knobs: 49 1/8 x 36 1/4 in. (124.8 x 92.1 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Edward Elliott Family Collection, Purchase, The Dillon Fund Gift, 1982 (1982.2.1) © 2000–2016 The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

This painting was inscribed by the Chan (Zen) Buddhist priest Yanxi Guangwen between 1254 and 1256, while he was abbot of Lingyin temple in Hangzhou. The work is an important example of early Chan Buddhist "apparition" painting, so called for its pale, sensitive brushwork.

Depicted here is a famous encounter between the Confucian scholar Li Ao (active ca. 840) and the Chan master Yaoshan. Having heard of the master's reputation, the scholar went to see him but was disappointed and remarked: "Seeing your face is not as good as hearing your name." The master replied: "Would you distrust your eye and value your ear?" Then, pointing up and down, the master indicated that the ultimate reality is in what can be seen, such as "clouds in the sky and water in a vase."

Yanxi Guangwen's inscription on the painting reads: 

All moments of enlightenment come in a flash,
Why distrust your eye and value your ear?
Just as between the water and the clouds,
Do not say there is nothing there.

Just as the Chan master used riddles to sharpen the student's perception in spite of distracting hearsay, the Chan painter used a simple and spontaneous, albeit elusive, brush style to capture his fleeting vision of truth. 

This work is exhibited in the "Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from the Metropolitan Collection" exhibition, on view through October 11th, 2016. 

Polychrome stone sculpture of an Evangelist, Île-de-France, 14th century

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Polychrome stone sculpture of an Evangelist, Île-de-France, 14th century. Photo Hampel

Height: 79 cm. Lot 426. Estimation: € 50.000 - 70.000

According to family tradition of the previous owner this sculpture depicts Saint Matthew.

Hampel. 7 avril 2016

Unidentified Artist , active ca. 1300, Lotus and waterbirds, ca. 1300, Yuan dynasty (1271–1368)

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Unidentified Artist , active ca. 1300, Lotus and waterbirds 元 佚名 蓮花圖 軸, ca. 1300, Yuan dynasty (1271–1368). Pair of hanging scrolls; ink and color on silk. Image (each): 55 3/4 x 26 3/4 in. (141.6 x 67.9 cm) Overall with mounting (each): 107 1/2 x 27 1/4 in. (273.1 x 69.2 cm) Overall with knobs (each): 107 1/2 x 27 3/4 in. (273.1 x 70.5 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Purchase, The Dillon Fund Gift, 1988 (1988.155a, b) © 2000–2016 The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Imported from India, the lotus—growing from the slime of a pond, its blossoms blooming unsullied—was linked to Buddhist images of purity and rebirth. By the thirteenth century, naturalistic depictions of lotus in different seasons also evoked the ephemeral nature of physical beauty. This large-scale decorative work is by a professional painter of the Piling School, situated near Changzhou, Jiangsu Province. The midsummer scene (on the right) shows lotus flowers in early stages of budding and bloom, while the autumnal scene (on the left) shows its later stages: petals falling, leaves turning brown, and seed pods ripening. The newly sprouted water reeds of midsummer also contrast with the late-blooming water plant and the smartweed that has gone to seed, while the busy activity of a pair of ducks skimming the water for food on the right is juxtaposed with two egrets resting quietly on the left. 

This work is exhibited in the "Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from the Metropolitan Collection" exhibition, on view through October 11th, 2016. 

Standing figure of the Man of Sorrows, Upper Rhine, ca. 1500-1530

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Standing figure of the Man of Sorrows, Upper Rhine, ca. 1500-1530. Photo Hampel

Height: 122 cm. Height incl. base: 129 cm. Lot 88. Estimation: € 30.000 - 50.000

Carved and polychrome limewood. Hollowed on the reverse. The polychromy is in parts still original but with retouching.

Hampel30 juin 2016

Zhang Yucai (Chinese, died 1316), Beneficent Rain, late 13th–early 14th century, Yuan dynasty (1271–1368)

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Zhang Yucai (Chinese, died 1316), Beneficent Rain 元 張羽材 霖雨圖 卷, late 13th–early 14th century, Yuan dynasty (1271–1368). Handscroll; ink on silk. Image: 10 9/16 x 107 in. (26.8 x 271.8 cm) Overall with mounting: 11 in. x 24 ft. 11 13/16 in. (27.9 x 753.9 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Gift of Douglas Dillon, 1985 (1985.227.2) © 2000–2016 The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Zhang Yucai, the thirty-eighth pope of the Zhengyi ("Orthodox Unity") Daoist church, lived at Mount Longhu (Dragon Tiger Mountain) in Jiangxi Province. A favorite of the Yuan emperors, he received commendation from the Mongol court for inducing needed rain and for subduing a "tide monster" that had plagued the eastern seacoast.

Dragons, as symbols of nature's elemental forces, have been depicted in Chinese art from time immemorial. A special genre, dragon paintings were given powerful treatment by such Southern Song masters as Chen Rong (act. ca. 1235-62) and the Chan Buddhist painter Muqi (act. ca. 1240-75). In a fourteenth-century account, Chen's working methods are described as follows: He "makes clouds by splashing ink, creates vapor by spraying water, and, while drunk, shouting loudly, takes off his cap, soaks it in ink, and smears and rubs with it, before finishing the painting with a brush."

On Chen Rong's celebrated Nine Dragons handscroll dated 1244, in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, there is a colophon dated 1331 by Zhang Yucai's son Zhang Sicheng, the thirty-ninth Daoist pope (r. 1317–44). Beneficent Rain is closely related to Chen Rong's Nine Dragons both in content and in style, and may have been directly inspired by the Boston scroll or others like it.

This work is exhibited in the "Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from the Metropolitan Collection" exhibition, on view through October 11th, 2016. 

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Attributed to the Master of Elsloo, active between 1510 and 1524, Large carved figural group of the Virgin and Child. Photo Hampel

Height: 127 cm. Carved walnut without polychromy with glossy patina, hollowed at the back. Lot 430. Estimation: € 55.000 - 65.000

ProvenancePrivate collection, Antwerp.

Hampel7 avril 2016


Kedleston Hall

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Caesars’ Hall, the everyday ground-floor entrance hall at Kedleston Hall©National Trust Images/Nadia Mackenzie

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Part of the Marble Hall at Kedleston Hall©National Trust Images/Dennis Gilbert

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The Marble Hall at Kedleston. ©NTPL/Dennis Gilbert

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Pause amongst the pillars... at Kedleston.©NTPL/Dennis Gilbert

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The Drawing Room at Kedleston Hall, Derbyshire. The chimneypiece and ceiling were designed by Paine, while the doorcases and sofas are slightly later additions by Robert Adam©NTPL/Nadia Mackenzie

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One of the sofas in its Drawing Room setting. The blue damask is meant to reinforce the maritime theme©NTPL/Nadia Mackenzie

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Reclining mermaid on one of a set of four sofas supplied by John Linnell to Kedleston Hall in 1765©NTPL/Nadia Mackenzie

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Chinoiserie porcelain cabinet by John Linnell, in the Wardrobe at Kedleston©NTPL/Dennis Gilbert

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Detail of the State Apartments at Kedleston, with a blue-john urn and a gilded fillet surrounding the fireplace©NTPL/Dennis Gilbert

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A design for the decoration of a state room at Kedleston, c. 1757-58, by James 'Athenian' Stuart©NTPL/John Hammond

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The first Lord and Lady Scarsdale walking in the grounds of Kedleston Hall by Nathaniel Hone, 1761©NTPL/John Hammond

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Design by Robert Adam for the Dining Room at Kedleston. Note the similarities with the south facade shown above. ©NTPL/John Hammond

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The Dining Room at Kedleston©NTPL/Nadia Mackenzie

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A set of twelve silver-gilt plates that was made for Kedleston Hall, Derbyshire. ©NTPL/John Hammond 

It was part of a dinner service commissioned by Sir Nathaniel Curzon, 5th Baronet and later 1st Baron Scarsdale, in 1756.

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Sir Nathaniel and Lady Caroline Curzon, by Arthur Devis©NTPL/John Hammond

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The south front of Kedleston Hall©NTPL/Rupert Truman

A fahua reticulated double-gourd vase, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century

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A fahua reticulated double-gourd vase, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century

Lot 823. A fahua reticulated double-gourd vase, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century. Estimate USD 10,000 - USD 15,000. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016

The lower and upper body are decorated with scholars at various pursuits amidst clouds and pine trees against a pierced ground, with ruyi heads at the waist, and petal-lappet borders at the mouth and foot. The decoration is glazed in turquoise, yellow and white against a rich aubergine ground. 13 ¾ in. (35 cm.) high

ProvenanceRalph M. Chait, New York, no. 6129, according to label. 
John D. Rockefeller Jr. (1874-1960) Collection.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, accessioned in 1960.

Christie's. Collected in America: Chinese Ceramics from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 15 September 2016, New York, Rockefeller Plaza

A large fahua reticulated jar and cover, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century

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A large Fahua reticulated jar and cover, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century

Lot 824. A large fahua reticulated jar and cover, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century. Estimate USD 8,000 - USD 12,000. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016

The reticulated jar is decorated around the mid-section with a continuous scene of scholars in a landscape amidst pines and clouds, above a band of petal lappets encircling the foot and below a band of peonies on the shoulder, and with vaporous clouds on the waisted neck. The cover is decorated with flower sprays beneath a biscuit finial of a seated sage. 17 ½ in. (44.4 cm.) high

ProvenanceMr. and Mrs. Isaac D. Fletcher (d. 1917) Collection.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, accessioned in 1918. 

Notesfahua jar with very similar subsidiary borders, but with a main band of the Eight Immortals around the sides, is illustrated by E. Gorer and J. F. Blacker, Chinese Porcelains and Hard Stones, vol. II, London, 1911, pl. 195. See, also, the fahua jar with a broad band of scholars in  a landscape similar to that on the present jar, and also with similar subsidiary bands, from the Ira and Nancy Koger Collection, sold at Christie’s New York, 19 September 2006, lot 238.

Christie's. Collected in America: Chinese Ceramics from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 15 September 2016, New York, Rockefeller Plaza

A fahua vase, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century.

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A fahua vase, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century

Lot 825. A fahua vase, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century. Estimate USD 7,000 - USD 9,000. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016

The robustly potted, broad-shouldered, tapering body is decorated in relief with beaded chains suspending monster masks above figures in a mountainous landscape, and below a large ruyi collar on the shoulder. The relief decoration is highlighted in turquoise, green and cream glaze against a mottled dark aubergine ground. 10 ¾ in. (27.3 cm.) high

ProvenanceJohn D. Rockefeller Jr. (1874-1960) Collection.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, accessioned in 1960.

Christie's. Collected in America: Chinese Ceramics from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 15 September 2016, New York, Rockefeller Plaza

A pair of massive fahua jardinières, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century

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A pair of massive fahua jardinières, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century

Lot 828. A pair of massive fahuajardinières, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century. Estimate USD 20,000 - USD 30,000. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016

Each is decorated in thread-relief outline with various blossoming flowers. The decoration is glazed in subtle tones of aubergine and white against a rich turquoise ground. Each is fitted with a metal liner. 33 ½ in. (85 cm.) diam., wood stands

ProvenanceMr. and Mrs. Isaac D. Fletcher (d. 1917) Collection.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, accessioned in 1922..

Christie's. Collected in America: Chinese Ceramics from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 15 September 2016, New York, Rockefeller Plaza

Cornelis Jansz de Heem, Still life with fruit, oysters and a roman goblet

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Cornelis Jansz de Heem (1631 Leiden - 1695 Antwerp), Still life with fruit, oysters and a roman gobletOil on canvas. Relined. 78 x 65.5 cm. Photo Hampel

Lot 188. Estimate: € 40000-60000

According to the previous owner the authenticity of the painting was confirmed by Fred Meijer. 

The son of Jan Davidsz. de Heem - a key figure of 17th century Flemish still life painitng - Cornelis de Heem trained with his father and was a brilliant and worthy artistic successor. Cornelis largely adopted his father’s repertoire and creative logic and in his best works he is definitely his father’s equal in both technique and use of colour. Dr Fred G. Meijer ranks the offered painting as a work by Cornelis de Heem created in the artist’s heyday around 1670, just after leaving his father’s workshop and settling in Utrecht. The still lifes by Cornelis de Heem held at the Gemäldegalerie in Dresden, the Kunsthalle in Hamburg and the Musée Royaux des Beaux Arts in Brussels all show striking similarities with the present work.

Literature: Exhibition catalogue Naples, Museo Duca di Martina, L. Ambrosio (ed.),Un museo... tutto da bere. Arte e vino, 21 December 2011 - 15 April 2012, Naples, 2011, p. 104, no. 9.

Hampel. 7 avril 2016 

Joris van Son (1623 Antwerp - 1677), Still life with tray of fruit, crayfish and oysters

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Joris van Son (1623 Antwerp - 1677), Still life with tray of fruit, crayfish and oysters. Oil on canvas. Relined. 49 x 65 cm. Photo Hampel

Signed lower left. 

Joris van Son what one of the most talented followers of Jan Davidsz. de Heem. Just as his master, he Specialised in still lifes with fruit, flowers, crustaceans and manyother typical motifs of Flemish and Dutch painting banquet. The choice and arrangement of the objects in the present signed work is very typical for van Son. It shows all of his excellent qualities and what Therefore probably painted during his artistic heyday around 1670. The painting shows many similarities with other works conclusively attributed to van Sons, seeking as

Several still lifes with fruit and lobsters, for example, at the National Museum in Stockholm, the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, the Galerie De Jonckheere, Brussles / Paris, or the painting sold on 4 July 2012 at Christie's in London.

Hampel. 7 avril 2016


A Cizhou-type polychrome-decorated baluster vase, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century

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A Cizhou-type polychrome-decorated baluster vase, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century

Lot 827. A Cizhou-type polychrome-decorated baluster vase, Ming dynasty, 15th-16th century. Estimate USD 3,000 - USD 5,000. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016

The wide body is decorated with three shaped panels enclosing figures in a riverscape, above a continuous band of qilingalloping on roiling waves, and beneath a band of leafy lotus scroll encircling the shoulder. 13 1/8 in. (33.2 cm.) high

ProvenanceMrs. Samuel T. Peters (1859-1943) Collection.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, accessioned in 1926

Christie's. Collected in America: Chinese Ceramics from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 15 September 2016, New York, Rockefeller Plaza

An iron-red, yellow and green-enameled vase, meiping, 17th century

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An iron-red, yellow and green-enameled vase, meiping, 17th century

Lot 828. An iron-red, yellow and green-enameled vase, meiping, 17th century. Estimate USD 1,500 - USD 2,500. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016

The vase is decorated on one side with a courtier flanked by two attendants, beside an immortal holding a scepter standing on billowing clouds, and on the reverse with a lady seated in a garden beside a rabbit on further clouds, all above a band of boys amidst lotus scroll on the waisted lower section. The base is inscribed with an apocryphal Jiajing mark. 9 7/8 in. (25.1 cm.) high

ProvenanceThe Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, accessioned in 1925 (Rogers Fund).

Christie's. Collected in America: Chinese Ceramics from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 15 September 2016, New York, Rockefeller Plaza

Maison Margiela, “Drapery Study” Ensemble, spring/summer 1997, Semi–Couture

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Maison Margiela (French, founded 1988). Martin Margiela (Belgian, born 1957). “Drapery Study” Ensemble, spring/summer 1997, Semi–CouturePhoto © Nicholas Alan Cope.

Machine–sewn yellow synthetic velvet half–dress; machine–sewn natural linen plain–weave vest, hand–stamped with Stockman dummy text, hand–sewn hook–and–eye closures, hand–basted with white cotton twill tape; unfinished black silk chiffon, hand–draped and –tacked. 

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Maison Margiela (French, founded 1988). Martin Margiela (Belgian, born 1957). “Drapery Study” Ensemble (detail), spring/summer 1997, Semi–CouturePhoto © Nicholas Alan Cope

Machine–sewn yellow synthetic velvet half–dress; machine–sewn natural linen plain–weave vest, hand–stamped with Stockman dummy text, hand–sewn hook–and–eye closures, hand–basted with white cotton twill tape; unfinished black silk chiffon, hand–draped and –tacked. Photo © Nicholas Alan Cope

#ManusxMachina#CostumeInstitute

Buzzanca Gioielli. Buzzanca chess-set, pearls, gold, diamonds

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Buzzanca Gioielli. Buzzanca chess-set, pearls, gold, diamonds. Photo courtesy Buzzanca Gioielli

A sapphire-blue overlay white glass ‘Peony and Butterflies’ snuff bottle, Qianlong mark and period

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A sapphire-blue overlay white glass ‘Peony and Butterflies’ snuff bottle, Qianlong mark and period

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Lot 226. A sapphire-blue overlay white glass ‘Peony and Butterflies’ snuff bottle, Qianlong mark and period. Estimate 8,000 — 12,000 USD. Photo Sotheby's

of baluster form, carved through the blue layer to the opaque milky-white ground with a continuous scene of butterflies hovering around large peony blossoms borne on branches growing from behind a rock, the base incised with four-character wheel-cut mark, stopper (2). Height 2 1/8  in., 5.5 cm

Provenance: Eugene Sung, New York, 1974..

Property from the collection of Robert and Maurine Muntz

NotesThe present lot belongs to a group of carved overlay glass snuff bottles attributed to the Imperial glassworks, Beijing, believed to have been produced during the second half of the Qianlong period. A number of similar bottles are preserved in the Qing court collections in both Palace Museums. See a very similar example in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, exhibited in Lifting the Spirit and Body: The Art and Culture of Snuff Bottles, Taipei, 2012, cat. no. II-063, and another preserved in Beijing, illustrated in Snuff Bottles. The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Hong Kong, 2003, pl. 33. Similar Qianlong mark and period bottles from The Mary and George Bloch Collection have sold in our Hong Kong rooms, 24th November 2014, lot 160 and 26th May 2014, lot 1051.

Sotheby'sImportant Chinese Art, New York, 13 sept. 2016, 10:30 AM

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