Page 119 - Mounted Oriental Porcelain, The Getty Museum
P. 119

22.    VASE




                                     THE PORCELAIN: Chinese (Kangxi),  1662-172,2,
        THE GILT-BRONZE MOUNTS:  French (Paris), circa  1770, attributed  to  Pierre Gouthiere (i732?-i8i3/i4, master  1758)
                                                            5
                      HEIGHT:  i ft.,  9^4 in. (54.2 cm);  WIDTH:  io /8 in.  (27 cm);  DEPTH:  9% in.  (25 cm)
                                                      87.01.137





            DESCRIPTION
            The  surface  of the  vase is incised  with  magnolias,
       rocks,  geese,  a  moon  or  a  sun,  and  a  bamboo  plant
       around  the  base. It  is covered  with  a dark  purple glaze
       (fig.  22A).
            The  vase  is mounted  with  gilt  bronze  around  the
       lip  and  foot.  A band  of alternating  gadroons  and  small
       leafy  branches  encircles  the  rim.  Placed  immediately
       below is a grapevine with  leaves and  fruit.  Goats' heads
       are mounted  on  the  side  of the  vase beneath  the  grape-
       vine, their horns curled back and up onto the rim. From
       their  necks  depend  trophies  of  crossed  branches  of
       grapevine  with  leaves and  fruit,  bound  by  a  ribbon  to
       panpipes  (figs.  22B and  22C). The  vase is supported  on
       four  lion's  paws.  At the  sides double  scrolling  acanthus
       branches rise from  the  feet,  each terminating in a  cock's
       head.  The  scrolls  support  seated  baby  satyrs  eating
       grapes  (fig. 220). At the  front  and  back  of the  vase  the
       lion's  paw  feet  are  topped  with  acanthus  which  extend
       over  the  foot  mount.  The  latter  is decorated  at  the  top
       edge with a twisted band above a torus molding of laurel
       leaves  and  berries.  A  mount  of  opposed  fruiting  acan-
       thus leaf  scrolls flanked by vines rises above the foot rim
       at the front  and  back of the vase.                      FlG.  22.A

            MARKS   None.
                                                            Kangxi  reign.  The  magnolia  is  the  symbol  of  nobility
            COMMENTARY                                       and  purity.  Its  Chinese  name,  yulan,  consists  of  two
            The  vase  is  intact  and  has  not  been  cut  down.  characters: yu  for jade (long life)  and  Ian for cymbidium
       Vases  of this  form were  known  as  rouleaux  during  the  (purity).  Purple  magnolia  blossoms  were  used  medici-
        eighteenth  century  because they  were  tall  and  cylindri-  nally in  China.
        cal. The  origin  of this form is a ritualistic  bronze vessel  Originally, this vase was probably one of a pair. An
        called  a gu, which  was  first  used  in  China  during  the  almost identically mounted  pair  in the collections  of the
        Shang dynasty (circa 1600-1000 B.C.). The purple glaze  Baron  and  Baronne  Cassel van Doom was  sold  at  auc-
       was a new type, invented at the imperial kilns during the  tion  in  1954  and  again  in  1981  from  the  Bensimon





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