Skip to main content
A fine blue and white 'lotus and ducks' sleeve vase Shunzhi image 1
A fine blue and white 'lotus and ducks' sleeve vase Shunzhi image 2
Lot 33

A fine blue and white 'lotus and ducks' sleeve vase
Shunzhi

10 November 2016, 10:30 GMT
London, New Bond Street

Sold for £87,500 inc. premium

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

Ask about this lot

A fine blue and white 'lotus and ducks' sleeve vase

Shunzhi
The strongly-potted body vibrantly painted in vivid shades of underglaze blue with a continuous scene of four ducks in flight and at rest amongst rockwork, lotus, peonies and grasses, all between delicately-incised decorative bands at the foot and neck and freely-painted lappets at the rim. 46.5cm (18 1/4in) high

Footnotes

清順治 青花蓮塘飛雁筒瓶

Provenance: S. Marchant & Son, Ltd., London, acquired on 28 September 1982
Sonia Lightfoot (1937-2016), and thence by descent

Exhibited and Published:
Oriental Ceramic Society, The World in Blue and White, London, 2 June - 30 November 2003, no.65

來源:於1982年9月28日購自倫敦古董商S. Marchant & Son, Ltd.
Sonia Lightfoot女士(1937-2016)收藏,並由後人保存迄今

展覽及出版:
2003年6月2日至11月30日於倫敦東方陶瓷學會「The World in Blue and White (青花世界)」特展展出,展品65號

The lotus (lian 蓮) and reed (lu 蘆) depicted on the vase is a rebus for the blessing 'may you pass your exams all the way' (yilu lianke 一路連科). The theme of succeeding up the ladder of Civil Service examinations is confirmed by the ducks (ya 鴨). The Chinese character for duck bears the radical for 'armour' (jia 甲), which is also the term used for the classification of successful candidates in the final Palace examinations. The flying ducks encapsulated the aspirations of hopeful literati wishing to rise up and serve the dynasty as high-ranking officials.

Compare with a related blue and white sleeve vase, with flowers and birds, Shunzhi, illustrated in Seventeenth Century Jingdezhen Porcelain from the Shanghai Museum and the Butler Collections, Shanghai, 2005, pl.40.

Additional information

Bid now on these items