A RARE IMPERIAL INSCRIBED WHITE JADE TEABOWL AND COVER
A RARE IMPERIAL INSCRIBED WHITE JADE TEABOWL AND COVER
A RARE IMPERIAL INSCRIBED WHITE JADE TEABOWL AND COVER
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ANOTHER PROPERTY
A RARE IMPERIAL INSCRIBED WHITE JADE TEA BOWL AND COVER

QIANLONG INCISED SIX-CHARACTER SEAL MARKS AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)

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A RARE IMPERIAL INSCRIBED WHITE JADE TEA BOWL AND COVER
QIANLONG INCISED SIX-CHARACTER SEAL MARKS AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)
The bowl is incised on the exterior with a poem titled Sanqing cha composed by the Qianlong Emperor that ends with a Bingyin cyclical date and followed by two seals, Qian and Long, all enclosed within a border of ruyi-heads at the mouth rim and around the base. The interior is further carved with a finger citron, prunus and pine. The matching domed cover is similarly incised with the same text. The semi-transparent stone is of a pale celadon tone with areas of opaque inclusions.
4 1/8 in. (10.7 cm.) diam.
来源
A prominent Japanese tea master, acquired in 2000

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拍品专文

It is unusual to find inscribed jade teabowls, as a number of these were usually on porcelain, either decorated in underglaze blue or iron red. The poem on the current bowl, Sanqing cha, 'Tea of Three Purities', was composed by the Qianlong Emperor. Compare with two ceramic bowls similarly decorated, the first in the collection of the National Palace Museum, Taipei, included in the exhibition, Empty Vessels, Replenished Minds: The Culture, Practice and Art of Tea, and illustrated in the Catalogue, 2002, p. 152, no. 129; and another also in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, illustrated in Emperor Qianlong's Grand Cultural Enterprise, Taipei, 2002, p. 51, cat. no. I-40.

It has been mentioned that the Qianlong Emperor was an avid drinker of tea, and in the 11th year of his reign (1746) on his return from visiting Mount Wutai, Shanxi province, his entourage sojourned to make tea using fallen snow. In the brew, as well as Longjing tea leaves, were the additions of prunus, pine nut kernels and finger citrus. It was this concoction that inspired the Emperor to compose the present poem.

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