Sold for €9,750
including Buyer's Premium
Well hollowed, the rounded rectangular body supported on a wide oval foot and rising to a short cylindrical neck with a flat lip. Neatly incised to one side with a ferocious dragon emerging from swirling clouds and exhaling smoke as it reaches for the sacred pearl in the water below, and to the other side with fishermen in a sampan floating along a river, with a pavilion on the shore under a cliff. The base incised with a fruiting peach branch. The translucent stone is of a superb white color, near-absolutely pure, with very few minute cloudy and pale brown inclusions.
Provenance: The VWS Collection, acquired by the previous owner’s father (1890-1977) in China during the 1930s and thence by descent within the family. The VWS collection tells the extraordinary story of a family fleeing the Tsarist Empire in Russia. Their journey began in 1903 as the Chinese Eastern Railway, the eastern branch of the Trans-Siberian Railway, was completed. Fleeing, like others, a climate of political persecution and anti-Semitism, the family settled in Harbin, the northernmost city in China and started to develop its businesses from 1906 onwards. Like many others, they were attracted to this cosmopolitan place, then a major economic and cultural center in Manchuria, because of its large Jewish community. In Harbin, the father, a cultured, open-minded and multilingual man, felt at home and his early successes in business earned him respect. By 1932, he and his family were forced to flee again, following the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, and found a new home in Shanghai. From there, his businesses took him to Hong Kong, North America, and other Asian countries, where the family would remain for many years. They began collecting art in China during the 1930s and these artworks have remained with the family heirs ever since.
Condition: Very good condition with only minor wear and minuscule nibbling to the interior of the mouth. Natural inclusions and fissures, mostly invisible to the naked eye.
Stopper: Coral cabochon of good color, carved as a coiled chilong
Weight: 66.6 g
Dimensions: Height including stopper 65 mm. Diameter neck 19 mm and mouth 6 mm
Well hollowed, the rounded rectangular body supported on a wide oval foot and rising to a short cylindrical neck with a flat lip. Neatly incised to one side with a ferocious dragon emerging from swirling clouds and exhaling smoke as it reaches for the sacred pearl in the water below, and to the other side with fishermen in a sampan floating along a river, with a pavilion on the shore under a cliff. The base incised with a fruiting peach branch. The translucent stone is of a superb white color, near-absolutely pure, with very few minute cloudy and pale brown inclusions.
Provenance: The VWS Collection, acquired by the previous owner’s father (1890-1977) in China during the 1930s and thence by descent within the family. The VWS collection tells the extraordinary story of a family fleeing the Tsarist Empire in Russia. Their journey began in 1903 as the Chinese Eastern Railway, the eastern branch of the Trans-Siberian Railway, was completed. Fleeing, like others, a climate of political persecution and anti-Semitism, the family settled in Harbin, the northernmost city in China and started to develop its businesses from 1906 onwards. Like many others, they were attracted to this cosmopolitan place, then a major economic and cultural center in Manchuria, because of its large Jewish community. In Harbin, the father, a cultured, open-minded and multilingual man, felt at home and his early successes in business earned him respect. By 1932, he and his family were forced to flee again, following the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, and found a new home in Shanghai. From there, his businesses took him to Hong Kong, North America, and other Asian countries, where the family would remain for many years. They began collecting art in China during the 1930s and these artworks have remained with the family heirs ever since.
Condition: Very good condition with only minor wear and minuscule nibbling to the interior of the mouth. Natural inclusions and fissures, mostly invisible to the naked eye.
Stopper: Coral cabochon of good color, carved as a coiled chilong
Weight: 66.6 g
Dimensions: Height including stopper 65 mm. Diameter neck 19 mm and mouth 6 mm
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