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 AN IRON-RED HOLY WATER VASE   清乾隆   礬紅彩折枝蓮紋甘露瓶
 QING DYNASTY, QIANLONG PERIOD
 Height 8¾ in., 22.2 cm
 來源
 香港蘇富比2020年11月27日,編號106 (其一)
 PROVENANCE
 Sotheby’s Hong Kong, 27th November 2020, lot 106 (part lot).
 A vase of this form and design can be seen in a painting by
 Giuseppe Castiglione, in the Palace Museum, Beijing, showing
 the Qianlong Emperor seated under a pine tree with a table
 to his right set with several treasures from his collection. The
 painting was included in the Palast-museum Peking Schätze
 aus der Verbotenen Stadt, Berlin, 1985, cat. no. 41.
 These holy water vases may have been produced as
 offerings for the altar of a Tibetan Buddhist shrine in
 the Forbidden City. While imperial porcelains are usually
 inscribed with marks of the reigning emperors, exceptions
 are not uncommon, especially for items used in Buddhist
 ceremonies. In Feng Xianming, Annotated Collection of
 Historical Documents on Ancient Chinese Ceramics, Taipei,
 2000, p. 241, Feng discusses a court record that documents
 the Qianlong Emperor decreeing marks not to be used on
 some holy water bottles with iron-red designs made in the
 11th year of his reign (1746). For a closely related vessel from
 the Qing Court Collection, see one published in The Complete
 Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum. Miscellaneous
 Enameled Porcelains Plain Tricoloured Porcelains, Shanghai,
 2009, pl. 29. For another example presented to Cheltenham
 College, England, by Yuan Shikai in 1914, and now in the
 Weishaupt Collection, see G. Avitabile, From the Dragon’s
 Treasure, London, 1987, pl. 176. Compare also a pair of similar
 holy water bottles sold at Christie’s London, 11th May 2010,
 lot 248.
 $ 20,000-30,000




































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