The Mary and George Bloch Collection of Chinese Snuff Bottles: Part IV
Monday 28 November 2011 at 10am

View the online catalogue

Click here to download a bidding form
Sale Number: 19621 section 1

Monday 28 November 2011 at 10am
Island Shangri-La Hotel, Island Ballroom
Pacific Place, Supreme Court Road
Admiralty
Hong Kong (click here for map)

Bonhams contact information at Island Shangri-La
from 24 to 28 November:
Island Shangri-La Hotel
5/F Island Ballroom
Pacific Place, Supreme Court Road
Admiralty, Hong Kong
+852 2918 4321
+852 2918 4320 fax

Bonhams (Hong Kong) Limited
Suite 1122
Two Pacific Place
88 Queensway
Admiralty
Hong Kong
+852 2918 4321
+852 2918 4320 fax

Enquiries
Hong Kong
Julian King
+852 3607 0010
julian.king@bonhams.com

Sally Fong
+852 3607 0009
sally.fong@bonhams.com

Taipei
Sylvia Or
+886 2 8758 2898
sylvia.or@bonhams.com

Tokyo
Hiromi Ono
+81 3 5532 8636
hiromi.ono@bonhams.com

Bids
+852 2918 4321
+852 2918 4320 fax
To bid via the internet, please visit www.bonhams.com

Please note that bids should be submitted no later than Sunday 27 November.
New bidders must also provide proof of identity when submitting bids.
Failure to do this may result in your bids not being processed. Accepted bids will receive a Bid Confirmation Form.

 

Viewing

Beijing
Saturday 15 October 10am to 7pm
Sunday 16 October 10am to 7pm
China World Summit Wing
6/F, Function Room 61
No 1 Jianguomenwai Avenue,100004
+8610 6505 2299

Shanghai
Wednesday 19 October 10am to 7pm
Thursday 20 October 10am to 7pm
Hyatt on the Bund, Shanghai
Bund Ballroom
199 Huang Pu Road, 200080
+86 21 6393 1234

Palm Beach, Florida
Tuesday 25 October
Wednesday 26 October
Thursday 27 October
Friday 28 October
Saturday 29 October
ICSBS Convention: Four Seasons Resort

Taipei
Saturday 29 October 10am to 7pm
Sunday 30 October 10am to 7pm
Fubon International Convention
Center, B2F
No.108, Sec.1, Dunhua S. Rd.
Taipei, Taiwan
+886 2 8758 2898

Singapore (selected highlights)
Friday 4 November 10am to 7pm
Saturday 5 November 10am to 7pm
Grand Hyatt Singapore
(By Appointment Only)
10 Scotts Road, Singapore 228211

Hong Kong
Thursday 24 November 1pm to 9pm
Friday 25 November 10am to 9pm
Saturday 26 November 10am to 9pm
Sunday 27 November 10am to 9pm
Island Shangri-La Hotel
5/F, Island Ballroom
Pacific Place, Supreme Court Road
Admiralty, Hong Kong
+852 2918 4321

The text below is as it will appear on the Bonham's web site

Two numbers are given in each case, the lot number, followed by the number in the Bloch Catalogues (Moss, Graham, Tsang, A Treasury of Chinese Snuff Bottles. The Mary and George Bloch Collection. Hong Kong: Herald International. vol. 1, Jade (1995) nos. 1 - 187; vol. 2, Quartz (1998) nos. 188 - 379; vol. 3, Stones Other than Jade and Quartz (1998) nos. 380 - 436; vol. 4, Inside Painted (2000) nos. 437 - 674; vol. 5, Glass, (2002) nos. 675 -1060;Vol. 6, Arts of the Fire (2007) nos. 1061 – 1468; Vol. 7, Organic, metal, mixed media, (2009) nos. 1469 – 1720. Hereafter these volumes will be abbreviated to Treasury followed by the volume number (i.e. Treasury 6).

The following captions and commentaries are based upon this seven-volume catalogue, but we have made corrections and additions where appropriate. Hence, references to ‘we’ in the commentaries below refer to the authors of that series. Anyone wishing to find further information about a material, type of bottle, or particular artist, should consult the Treasury series, where a great deal of additional information will be found. The descriptions here, however, take precedence over those in the printed volumes for the purposes of the Bloch Collection auctions and incorporate additional research in some cases. Whenever a reference occurs to a page or entry number in the original Treasury text, it refers, of course, to those volumes.

With condition reports, we have painstakingly tried to list every defect, however small, state of wear, and any restoration. When a report says ‘workshop condition,’ ‘kiln condition’ or ‘studio condition’ it means that it appears the same as when it was first produced either in a workshop, pottery or studio and is in ‘mint’ condition – although any work of art which has been in existence for a century or more is liable to have invisible signs of wear if viewed through a sufficiently high powered magnifier. Where we note problems, we have sometimes also used an overriding ‘General relative condition’ which describes the condition taking into account any minor problems but also taking into account the usual state of such wares, and the normal wear and patination to soft materials, etc.

George Bloch died on 27 April 2009, drawing a close to his and Mary’s collecting activities in this field (which, as serious and well-informed collectors, spanned the years from about 1980 to late 2008). The Blochs were probably the greatest collectors of Chinese snuff bottles of modern times. A few others may have formed similarly large collections (William Bragge, Chester Beatty and Alex Cussons, for instance), and several others similarly good collections, but none have combined their approach to the snuff bottle as art and the sheer breadth and depth of the collection. The Blochs had a considerable advantage over the earlier group of major collectors. In recent times our knowledge of the subject has increased exponentially due to the studies of a growing group of individuals over the past half century. These individuals (and the Blochs are among them with their impressive programme of exhibitions and publications), allow a current generation of collectors to be far more discerning than their forebears. During their years of collecting, the Blochs also benefitted from the sterling efforts of the International Chinese Snuff Bottle Society, providing a significant part of a recent flood of fresh information through publication. This includes many thousands of bottles illustrated in new publications, including the imperial collection, the rump of which survives either in Beijing or Taipei, and a good deal of fresh information, some of it arising out of the recent publication of the records of the palace workshops (Zaobanchu). The capacity of the internet has also greatly facilitated access to fresh research and data. This new information, combined with the Blochs’ considerable means and commitment to collecting, allowed them to form one of the largest and best collections ever assembled. If all serious contenders were constrained to select only, say, 400 of their best bottles by which to be judged, then there would be several contenders for the finest collection of modern times, but when that number is increased to over 1700 examples, the Blochs are the only ones left in contention.

In accordance with George Bloch’s instructions and his and Mary’s long-term plan, the collection will be sold off in a series of small auctions, twice a year, over the next several years. With sensible and attractive estimates, full and honest condition reports, and a judicious selection for each auction, the market will be encouraged rather than alarmed by the quantities involved. A market without supply is hardly a market at all, but a market with a regular, guaranteed supply of the finest examples, well published and exhibited, fully catalogued, with impeccable provenance and spread over between 6 and 8 years is likely to encouraging both existing and new demand. This is also a combination which will greatly encourage the immense potential of a new generation of collectors from mainland China.

We have also taken the opportunity to evolve the system of snuff-bottle marketing with this collection. No major auction house has its own in-house snuff-bottle experts who can compete with the main dealers and collectors around the world, yet their ever-increasing charges suggest that they should provide such expertise. To overcome this problem, Bonham’s has agreed to work with the website e-yaji.com, which has been set up by Nicholas Moss with his uncle, Hugh Moss, as a consultant. The e-yaji team will deal with the Bloch Collection up until the point of sale, providing full descriptions and research (already mostly published in the Treasury series of catalogues but updated where necessary), painstaking condition reports, and multiple photographs that can be manipulated and enlarged to facilitate efficient viewing on a computer screen. This will all appear on our website, and the collection will be delivered to us for the final stages of exhibition and auction. The Bloch family undertake to guarantee all information provided by e-yaji.com and, therefore, by Bonham’s. A mirror of Bonham’s web pages for this collection will also appear on e-yaji.com, where a good deal of further research material on snuff bottles is being rapidly introduced which will be of use to those seeking more information about snuff bottles in general, and specific types or artists involved in the Bloch Collection sales.

We believe that this evolved system which we are pioneering for the snuff-bottle world will prove to be better system than the current one and avoid the problems for collectors of a catalogue (with often limited information in it) produced a few weeks before an auction, which is then held in a far-off city with collectors given a scant few days to view a large number of bottles, often under rather trying circumstances. We still encourage collectors to attend the auctions personally, of course, and to handle bottles from the collection, but having made an informed and initial selection from our web site. For those who cannot, the web site should be equal to a personal viewing of each bottle, and we are, as usual, happy to accept bids prior to the sale or to set up telephone bidding during the auction.

View the online catalogue

Copyright 2008-2012 Hugh Moss |