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A magnificent and rare cloisonné enamel and gilt-bronze tripod 'cranes' incense burner and cover Qianlong (2) image 1
A magnificent and rare cloisonné enamel and gilt-bronze tripod 'cranes' incense burner and cover Qianlong (2) image 2
A magnificent and rare cloisonné enamel and gilt-bronze tripod 'cranes' incense burner and cover Qianlong (2) image 3
A magnificent and rare cloisonné enamel and gilt-bronze tripod 'cranes' incense burner and cover Qianlong (2) image 4
Lot 96

A magnificent and rare cloisonné enamel and gilt-bronze tripod 'cranes' incense burner and cover
Qianlong

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

Sold for £149,000 inc. premium

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A magnificent and rare cloisonné enamel and gilt-bronze tripod 'cranes' incense burner and cover

Qianlong
Impressively cast and supported on the shoulders of three cranes, the globular body colourfully enamelled with a continuous scene of lotus pond, depicting swimming, flying, resting and pecking egrets amongst foliate lotus leaves and upright sprays of lotus blossoms beside craggy rocks and patchy grass, all beneath a gilt band of lotus lappets to the waisted neck, flanked by a pair of finely cast handles in the form of a sinuous dragon grasping an enamelled shou character roundel, the reticulated domed cover finely decorated with three large ruyi-shaped lappets enamelled with lotus flower heads surmounted by a gilt bronze bud-shaped finial meticulously cast with a writhing dragon amidst scrolling clouds. 86.4cm (34in) high (2).

Footnotes

清乾隆 銅胎掐絲琺瑯蓮塘鴛鴦圖鶴壽三足蓋爐

Provenance: a European private collection

來源:歐洲私人收藏

The Qianlong Emperor was a keen collector of objects of the past, advocating to restore ancient ways, suggesting that craftsmen turn to antiquity for models which would enable them to imbue their designs with simplicity and honesty in order to achieve refinement and elegance.

The present vessel is a magnificent example of the Qianlong period, combining the archaistic form derived from the Shang and Zhou dynasties ding ritual vessel, with the opulent taste of the Qing Court, utilising the vibrantly colourful cloisonné enamel embellished with the gilt bronze dragon finial and handles. The master craftsman has further elevated the vessel, both in height and in extravagance by using three long-legged cranes instead of cabriole legs as supports.

The magnificent vessel is imbued with auspicious associations as often seen on other Imperial works of art. The cranes symbolise immortality and are often shown as companions to Shoulao, the God of Longevity. Paintings of cranes had been popular in the Imperial Court since the Northern Song dynasty, when the Huizong Emperor (1082-1135) himself painted an iconic handscroll, 'Auspicious Cranes', now preserved in the Liaoning Provincial Museum, Shenyang, and illustrated by J.Cahill, 3000 Years of Chinese Painting, New Haven, 1997, p.123, fig.114; Cranes were also a recurring subject in the paintings of the Jesuit Court artist Giuseppe Castiglione (1688-1766). Further symbolism is imbued in the lotus, as one of the Eight Buddhist Emblems, and bajixiang and its association with purity.

Compare a closely related pair of cloisonné enamel incense burners and covers with crane supports bearing similar dragon handles, Qianlong, said to have come from the Summer Palace, Beijing and sold in our Hong Kong rooms on 4 December 2008, lot 202. See also a closely related pair of cloisonné enamel incense burners and covers with crane supports but with upright cloisonné enamel handles, Qianlong, in the British Museum, London, one of which is illustrated by E.S.Rawski and J.Rawson, eds., China: The Three Emperors 1662-1795, London, 2005, pl.304; for another similar example see H.Brinker and A.Lutz, Chinese Cloisonné: The Pierre Uldry Collection, New York, 1989, pl.323; and compare a pair similar to the British Museum example, sold at Sotheby's New York, 18 March 2014, lot 359.

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