Page 263 - J.J. Lally Chinese Art CHRISTIE'S March 23 2023 NYC
P. 263

936 A LARGE DATED BRONZE TRIPOD   清道光九年ǭ銅橋耳Ӳ足連座‐
 CENSER AND STAND
 DAOGUANG PERIOD, DATED BY INSCRIPTION TO 1829  Ϝ源
 藍理捷
 紐約
 編號
 The heavily cast, compressed body is raised on three feet and set
 with a pair of loop handles, with incised inscriptions on two sides.
 The stand is cast in the form of overlapping lily pads surrounding
 a ‘cash’ medallion in openwork and is supported on three ruyi-
 shaped feet. Both the censer and the stand have an attractive,
 mottled olive-brown and green patina.
 12 in. (30.5 cm.) across handles
 $18,000-25,000
 PROVENANCE:
 J. J. Lally & Co., New York, no. 4364.


 The inscription on one side of this incense burner is a cyclical date,   An 18th-century bronze censer and stand of this form, decorated
 Daoguang jiu nian meng dong ji ri li (made on an auspicious day in   with gold splashes and with an apocryphal Xuande reign mark
 the winter of the ninth year of Daoguang), corresponding to 1829.   on the base of the censer, is illustrated by P. Hu in Later Chinese
 The other inscription notes that the incense burner is respectfully   Bronzes: The Saint Louis Art Museum and Robert E. Kresko Collections,
 offered by “disciple Zeng Longchang.”  Saint Louis, 2008, pp. 137-141, no. 28.

 This classic form of incense burner first appears in the early Ming
 dynasty and continues in wide use at the court, in temple halls
 and in the scholar’s studio throughout the Qing dynasty. It is rare
 to find an example such as the present censer, which retains its
 original stand and is dated by an inscription.





































 (inscriptions)




 260                                                                                                                       261
   258   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268