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1268
1602831

A white biscuit Dragon Boat, Qing dynasty, 19th Century.

Estimate
15 000 - 18 000 SEK
1 340 - 1 610 EUR
1 360 - 1 630 USD
Hammer price
16 000 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 white biscuit Dragon Boat, Qing dynasty, 19th Century.

Finely carved with minuite details, the vessel in the form of a scaley dragon with upturned tail, a three tier pagoda on the back, the lower level with a lattice enclosed room containing a figure standing straight gazing ahead, further the deck has figures of the daoist immortals. Sturdy columns supporting the overhanging floor of the next level, the top section with a low balustrade and a large arched gateway with a peaked tile roof.
Rowers on both sides of the vessel, the dragon head prow has its tongue and eyes made so they can move. Length 28 cm. Height 24 cm. Measure with stand and box 30x32x17.5 cm.

Chips.

Provenance

Property of a private Swedish collector, the boat was given to them as a gift by a friend in the 1960's.

Exhibitions

Compare a dragon boat sold at Sothebys, New York, 1994, Novermber 28-29. lot no 385.

Compare also a boat sold at Christies, lot 1547. 29 May 2007, Live auction, 2369. Important Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art

Compare a dragon boat sold at Bonhams, 8318. Fine Asian Works of Art, 20 December 2011.

Literature

Chen Guozhi can often be identified as the sculptor of these works. He
was a well-known ceramic carver, particularly those of biscuit porcelain wares, who was active during the late Daoguang period. An example of a biscuit brushpot illustrated by S. Kwan, Imperial Porcelain of Late Qing, Art Gallery, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1983, p. 18, fig. 4; and a turquoise enamelled brushpot bearing the unusual mark of Daqing Daoguang Chen Guozhi zao, 'Made in the Daoguang period of the Great Qing dynasty by Chen Guozhi', in the Baur Collection is illustrated by J. Ayers, Chinese Ceramics in the Baur Collection, Geneva, 2000, p. 236, no. 340 (A658).