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1284
1485156

A famille-rose 'baragon tumed' tea bowl, Qing dynasty, Daoguang.

Estimate
4 000 - 6 000 SEK
358 - 537 EUR
366 - 549 USD
Hammer price
18 000 SEK
Purchasing info
For condition report contact specialist
Cecilia Nordström
Stockholm
Cecilia Nordström
Senior specialist Asian Ceramics and Works of Art, European Ceramics and Glass
+46 (0)739 40 08 02
A famille-rose 'baragon tumed' tea bowl, Qing dynasty, Daoguang.

Deep 'U'-shape, supported on a short foot, decorated around the exterior with a parade of auspicious animals and deities of the qi zheng bao ('Seven Treasures'), each set on a lotus flower within a mandorla above the sea, below alternating gold animal masks suspending tassels and between bands of the bajixiang ('Eight Buddhist Emblems') in iron-red divided by shou characters at the foot and rim, the interior with a lotus medallion centred with a vajra motif, the white base inscribed with an iron-red 'Baragon Tumed' mark in Mongolian script. Height 6,6 cm. Diameter 9 cm.

Wear.

Provenance

Property from a Swedish Private Collection.

The 'Baragon Tumed' mark on the base identifies the bowl as part of a service made at the imperial factories to celebrate the marriage of one of the Daoguang emperor's daughters to a Mongolian prince of the Tumed Banner in 1842.

Exhibitions

Compare a dish from this service at the British Museum, inventory no Franks.1689. Donated by: Sir Augustus Wollaston Frank

Literature

Compare; Sothebys, Echoes of Fragrance – Evolution of Tea Culture from the Tang to the Qing Dynasties 16 December 2021. Lot 5059.