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206
**AN ENAMELED PORCELAIN SNUFF BOTTLE
IMPERIAL, JINGDE ZHEN KILNS, DAOGUANG FOUR-CHARACTER MARK IN
IRON-RED SEAL SCRIPT AND OF THE PERIOD(1821-1850)
Of compressed form with slightly concave lip and recessed oval
foot surrounded by a footrim, painted in famille rose enamels on
one side with a Manchu groom leading a bactrian camel laden
with hunting rifles and a container of arrows attached to the
saddle, the other side painted with a Manchu huntsman riding a
piebald horse and leading a brown dog by a leash, the foot
inscribed with a four-character mark in iron-red seal script
reading Daoguang nian zhi (Made in the Daoguang period),
turquoise stopper with silver collar
5.8 cm. high
$10,000-15,000
P R O V E N A N C E :
Hugh Moss Ltd.
H. Hui and P. Lam suggest that the theme of two Manchu officials on
different mounts derives from renderings of the Imperial hunting trip
called Qiuli (Autumn hunting), which was instituted by the Kangxi
emperor and continued into the Daoguang reign in the early nineteenth
century. Between 1740 and 1745 the Qianlong emperor ordered the
painters at the Royal Painting Academy to illustrate this event (see Hui and
Lam, The Imperial Connection. Court Related Chinese Snuff Bottles, no.
115). There are other possible interpretations of the subject, however. The
racoon dog (gouhuan, nyctereutes procyonoides) together with the camel
(luotuo) make up a visual pun for the term, huanluo, meaning joy and
happiness. While the officials depicted signify a bureaucratic career much
aspired for by most intellectuals, several felicitous puns are hidden in other
decorative elements. The dog (gou or chuan) and the horse (ma) together
suggest chuanma, a term expressing loyalty. The dog and the saddle
(ma’an) produce another term, anchuan, which means safety. The rifles
(changqiang) stand for prosperity (changsheng). The camel (luotuo) with
two humps (feng) suggests abundance and happiness (fengluo). The
quiver (jiandai) conveys the hope that many generations (dai) will be
blessed with all these good things.
For other snuff bottles with Manchu equestrian imagery, see R. Kleiner,
Chinese Snuff Bottles. A Miniature Art from the Collection of Mary and
George Bloch, p. 211, no. 153; Snuff Bottles. The Complete Collection of
Treasures of the Palace Museum, p. 224, no. 341, with Daoguang mark
and design of a Manchu equestrian leading a dog and of a hunting scene;
and another Daoguang bottle decorated with piebald horse, formerly from
the J & J Collection, sold in these rooms, 25 April 2004, lot 821.
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