Sold for €7,800
including Buyer's Premium
Expert's note: According to Hugh Moss, “Zhou Leyuan began to paint this subject of fish and insects with a grassy rock bank quite early in his career, but most of the subject date from 1891 and 1892, the last two full years of production when it obviously became a popular part of his repertoire. Although Zhou repeated subjects, he never repeated compositions, every single bottle being re-thought as a work of art, unlike most of his contemporary artists who were largely decorative and repeated both subjects and compositions frequently. This is the form the subject generally takes in these later years, with the grassy bank wrapped around the bottle, but this is an early version of the classic subject.”
Of flattened form, the rounded rectangular body supported on a rimmed oval foot, rising to a slightly flared cylindrical neck with a flat lip. Powerfully painted bold rocks next to a meandering stream with some celestial eye goldfish and a catfish, and buzzing dragonflies and beetles above.
Inscription: To one side, signed ‘Zhou Leyuan’ and dated ‘In the first Autumn month of 1890’. One red seal, ‘Yuanyin’.
Provenance: Hugh Moss Ltd., Hong Kong, November 1997. Collection of Dr. Elsa R. Graser, Baltimore, USA, acquired from the above. Collection of Cynthia G. Locke, inherited from the above and thence by descent. The base with an old collector’s label, ‘3445’. A copy of the original invoice from Hugh Moss Ltd., Hong Kong, dated 8 November 1997, stating a purchase price of USD 5,000 or approx. EUR 8,800 (converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing), accompanies this lot. Also with a copy of a letter written and signed by Hugh Moss, addressed to Elsa Graser, dated 10 November 1997, noting that Zhou Leyuan is Moss's favorite inside painting artist and in his opinion “incredibly better than most of the others.” Hugh Moss (b. 1943) is an author, dealer, artist, lifelong collector, and enthusiast of Chinese art, and the foremost authority on Chinese snuff bottles. Elsa R. Graser was a teacher of Latin and English and one of the first women on the faculty of the Baltimore Polytechnic Institute. An avid collector of snuff bottles, she served as editor of the Journal of the International Chinese Snuff Bottle Society. Her daughter Cynthia Graser Locke (1923-2019) also collected snuff bottles and lived in Duxbury, Massachusetts.
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear and slight fading of colors and seal.
Stopper: Aquamarine, neatly carved in ‘Beijing’ style in the shape of an official’s hat, complete with integral finial and collar
Weight: 32.8 g
Dimensions: Height including stopper 68 mm. Diameter neck 15 mm and mouth 6 mm.
Expert's note: According to Hugh Moss, “Zhou Leyuan began to paint this subject of fish and insects with a grassy rock bank quite early in his career, but most of the subject date from 1891 and 1892, the last two full years of production when it obviously became a popular part of his repertoire. Although Zhou repeated subjects, he never repeated compositions, every single bottle being re-thought as a work of art, unlike most of his contemporary artists who were largely decorative and repeated both subjects and compositions frequently. This is the form the subject generally takes in these later years, with the grassy bank wrapped around the bottle, but this is an early version of the classic subject.”
Of flattened form, the rounded rectangular body supported on a rimmed oval foot, rising to a slightly flared cylindrical neck with a flat lip. Powerfully painted bold rocks next to a meandering stream with some celestial eye goldfish and a catfish, and buzzing dragonflies and beetles above.
Inscription: To one side, signed ‘Zhou Leyuan’ and dated ‘In the first Autumn month of 1890’. One red seal, ‘Yuanyin’.
Provenance: Hugh Moss Ltd., Hong Kong, November 1997. Collection of Dr. Elsa R. Graser, Baltimore, USA, acquired from the above. Collection of Cynthia G. Locke, inherited from the above and thence by descent. The base with an old collector’s label, ‘3445’. A copy of the original invoice from Hugh Moss Ltd., Hong Kong, dated 8 November 1997, stating a purchase price of USD 5,000 or approx. EUR 8,800 (converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing), accompanies this lot. Also with a copy of a letter written and signed by Hugh Moss, addressed to Elsa Graser, dated 10 November 1997, noting that Zhou Leyuan is Moss's favorite inside painting artist and in his opinion “incredibly better than most of the others.” Hugh Moss (b. 1943) is an author, dealer, artist, lifelong collector, and enthusiast of Chinese art, and the foremost authority on Chinese snuff bottles. Elsa R. Graser was a teacher of Latin and English and one of the first women on the faculty of the Baltimore Polytechnic Institute. An avid collector of snuff bottles, she served as editor of the Journal of the International Chinese Snuff Bottle Society. Her daughter Cynthia Graser Locke (1923-2019) also collected snuff bottles and lived in Duxbury, Massachusetts.
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear and slight fading of colors and seal.
Stopper: Aquamarine, neatly carved in ‘Beijing’ style in the shape of an official’s hat, complete with integral finial and collar
Weight: 32.8 g
Dimensions: Height including stopper 68 mm. Diameter neck 15 mm and mouth 6 mm.
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