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9/2/2020 Important Chinese Art | Sotheby's
associated with enameled porcelain, including the famous European-subject falangcai double-vase in the Eisei Bunko Museum,
Tokyo, illustrated in Toji taikei [World Ceramics. Qing Official Kilns], vol. 46, Tokyo, 1973, pl. 23. Compare also the famille-rose
'boys' vase and cover of the same form, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum. Porcelains with
Cloisonne Enamel Decoration and Famille Rose Decoration, Hong Kong, 1999, pl. 26. Only one other Qianlong mark and period
conjoined vase with a monochrome glaze is known, also with the same Ru-type glaze, acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
New York, in 1879 (acc.no. 79.2.952) (fig. 1).
The form was also reproduced in enameled metal and glass. Compare a Beijing enameled vase illustrated in Enameled Wares in the
Ming and Ch'ing Dynasties, The National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1999, cat. no. 124; a red overlay glass example in the Palace
Museum, Beijing, illustrated in Zhang Rong, Luster of Autumn Water: Glass of the Qing Imperial Workshop, Beijing, 2005, pl. 53.
Ian Thomas earned international renown as Queen Elizabeth II's dress designer for over 20 years. Born in Oxford in 1929, he
worked as an apprentice to the designer Norman Hartnell, where he worked on Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation robes. After 17
years working for Hartnell, Thomas opened his own couture business in Belgravia, in 1969. Under his own label he dressed many
members of the royal family. Thomas was awarded a Royal Warrant as dressmaker in 1973.
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