Another gold-splashed bronze double vase of this form from the Qing court collects ion, preserved in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, is illustrated in Through the Prism of the Past: Antiquarian Trends in Chinese Art of the 16th to 18th Century, Taipei, 2003, p. 157, fig. III-22. See also an example from the W.W. Winkworth collects ion, illustrated in The Minor Arts of China, III, Spink and Son Ltd, London, 1987, cat. no. 97, and an example illustrated by Robert H. Mowry, China's Renaissance in Bronze. The Robert H. Clague collects ion of Later Chinese Bronzes 1100-1900, Phoenix, AZ, 1994, pp. 190-191. See also a closely related example of the same size acquired from Sydney Moss Ltd., London by Robert E. Kresko, illustrated by Philip K. Hu, Later Chinese Bronzes - The Saint Louis Art Museum and Robert Kresko collects ions, St. Louis, 2008, cat. no. 36, and sold in these rooms, 6th April 2016, lot 3676.
Compare also two other Qianlong reign-marked gold-splashed double-vases from the Water, Pine and Stone Retreat collects ion sold in these rooms, one in the form of an arrow and guan vase, 8th October 2009, lot 1801 and another in the form of persimmons, 8th October 2010, lot 2189.