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 PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT ASIAN PRIVATE COLLECTION  清乾隆   窰變釉蒜頭瓶
 A RARE FLAMBÉ-GLAZED GARLIC-MOUTH VASE   《大清乾隆年製》款
 SEAL MARK AND PERIOD OF QIANLONG
 來源:
 the pear-shaped body rising from a splayed foot to a slender
 neck surmounted by a garlic-head mouth and thin lip, covered   倫敦佳士得1999年11月16日,編號233
 overall save for the footring with a rich and lustrous raspberry-
 red glaze with milky-lavender streaks drizzling down from the
 cream-coloured rim, the base with a mottled mushroom-brown
 wash
 25.6 cm, 10⅛ in.
 PROVENANCE
 Christie’s London, 16th November 1999, lot 233.

 HK$ 600,000-800,000
 US$ 77,500-104,000

 Elegantly shaped with smoothly sloping shoulders and
 elongated neck, suantouping or ‘garlic-mouth’ vases are
 among the most interesting vessel shapes of Chinese
 porcelain. The form, featuring a distinctive bulbous mouth in
 the shape of a garlic fruit, was popular in the Ming and Qing
 dynasties. Generally, imperial porcelain vases during the Qing
 period were manufactured for decorative purposes or as
 flower vases. Suantouping, with their typical narrow mouth,
 would be suited to hold one flower or a single fruiting branch,
 which would match one of those depicted on the vase.
 The origin of the ‘garlic-mouth’ as a decorative element, is
 uncertain, but the vessel itself is modelled after an archaic
 bronze wine vessel named hu with a mouth distinctively
 formed of garlic cloves, see Jenny So, Eastern Zhou Ritual
 Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, New York,
 1995, no. 52, where the hu is attributed to the late Eastern
 Zhou, late Warring States period, 4th-3rd century BC. The
 bronze hu equally features a slightly flaring ring foot, but a
 shorter, rounder body and a longer neck. In its shape, the
 suantouping of the Ming period tends to be closer to the
 bronze prototype than the Qing variant, which is much more
 elegantly shaped and better adapted to Qing court taste.
 It is extremely rare to find a Qianlong garlic-mouth vase
 with a flambe glaze. The form is more commonly found with
 a Ru-type glaze, such as an example from the Qing Court
 collection and still in Beijing, illustrated in The Complete
 Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum. Monochrome
 Porcelain, Hong Kong, 1999, pl. 215, and one sold in these
 rooms, 8th October 2008, lot 2512.















 Mark




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