AN UNUSUAL LARGE BRONZE INGOT-SHAPED CENSER AND COVER
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE TEXAS COLLECTION
AN UNUSUAL LARGE BRONZE INGOT-SHAPED CENSER AND COVER

17TH/18TH CENTURY

Details
AN UNUSUAL LARGE BRONZE INGOT-SHAPED CENSER AND COVER
17TH/18TH CENTURY
Supported on four legs cast as crouching foreigners, the flared sides bordered in narrow bands of key fret, the domed cover cast in openwork with the bajixiang amidst clouds below a pierced foliate band and an oval 'tray' heaped with babao which is also cast in openwork
15 5/8 in. (39.5 cm.) long

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Lot Essay

The present censer, modeled after a large ingot, would have provided an auspicious wish for wealth for the owner. The four figures supporting the censer on their backs are identified as foreigners by both their clothes and facial features. During the 17th and 18th centuries in China there was a fascination with all things foreign. This interest in foreigners, their clothes, customs and belongings, is reflected in a number of the arts of the period. Scrolls depicting tribute bearers from foreign lands were commissioned by the court, on which male and female figures from various countries were shown in their different costumes. On one such hand scroll in the collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing, the many figures are described as being from the West and the attributes of each couple are discussed in both Chinese and Manchu. See Splendors of a Flourishing Age, Macau, 1999, no. 42.

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