Page 193 - Christie's Important Chinese Art, March 23 to 24 2023 New York
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~1205
 A HARDSTONE AND CORAL-INSET GILT-
 METAL NECKLACE, LINGYUE
 QING DYNASTY (1644-1911)
 With turquoise, malachite, coral, and lapis insets.
 9¿ in. (23 cm.) across

 $8,000-12,000
 A lingyue, a necklace or a torque, was an essential
 part of court dress for a noblewoman. As with the
 majority of aspects of attire at the Imperial court,
 these necklaces were highly regulated, and the
 rank of the woman would determine the number
 of stones in the composition of the necklace. This
 necklace can be compared with a similar example
 sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 29 November 2017,
 lot 3032.

 清ǎ鎏金鑲寶雙龍戲珠紋領☼


 1206
 A COUCHED GOLD AND EMBROIDERED
 GAUZE `SHOU' ROUNDEL
 JIAQING PERIOD (1796-1820)
 10¡ in. (26.4 cm.) diam.

 $5,000-7,000
 Couched gold and embroidered gauze roundels
 1205  with shou characters are very rare and only one
 related example appears to have been published
 (see D. Hugus, Chinese Rank Badges: Symbols of
 Power, Wealth, and Intellect in the Ming and Qing
 Dynasties, Hong Kong, 2021, p. 122, no. 13.18 and
 Christie's New York, 22-23 September 2022,
 lot 862). For an example of a robe with similarly
 rendered shou roundels featuring double chilong,
 possibly made for the consort of the prince
 second in line for the throne, see, D. Hugus,
 Chinese Rank Badges: Symbols of Power, Wealth,
 and Intellect in the Ming and Qing Dynasties, Hong
 Kong, 2021, p. 123, fig. 13.19.


 清嘉慶ǎ金線紗❚雙螭團壽८補


 ~1207
 AN EMBROIDERED GOLD-GROUND
 RANK BADGE OF A CRANE, BUZI
 KANGXI PERIOD (1662-1722)                                 1207
 Together with an embroidered blue-ground
 fragment, late Qing dynasty.
 12q x 12æ in. (31.8 x 32.5 cm.)
          There are two main types of Kangxi period civil official’s badges. The first   For a similar example of an early Kangxi period badge of a silver pheasant
 $8,000-12,000  type features a bird with the wings in circular form and the second type   with wings outstretched with a ground of couched gold threads in concentric
          shows the bird in an upright position with wings outstretched, as can be   patterns, see an example sold in The Imperial Wardrobe: Fine Chinese
 PROVENANCE:
          seen on the present badge. Both types usually have a background of couched   Costume and Textiles from the Linda Wrigglesworth Collection; Christie's
 Acquired in New York, August 2012.
          gold-wrapped threads, but on earlier Kangxi badges the metallic thread   New York, 19 March 2008, lot 28. For an example of a later Kangxi badge of
 清康熙ǎ金ঃ彩❚ˏ品文官仙鶴補子  outlines each motif in concentric patterns and by the end of the Kangxi   an egret with wings outstretched, but on a ground of couched gold threads of
          period, the concentric patterns are replaced by straight horizontal lines.   straight horizontal lines, see an example illustrated by C. Hall et al., Heaven's
 Ϝ源
                                                              Embroidered Cloths: One Thousand Years of Chinese Textiles, Hong Kong,
 Ն藏於紐☼
     年 月                                               Urban Council of Hong Kong, 1995, pp. 294-95.

 1206
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