View full screen - View 1 of Lot 180. An imperial archaistic bronze ritual vessel and cover (Gui), Seal marks and period of Qianlong .

Property from a Colorado Private Collection

An imperial archaistic bronze ritual vessel and cover (Gui), Seal marks and period of Qianlong

Live auction begins on:

March 25, 01:30 PM GMT

Estimate

6,000 - 8,000 USD

Lot Details

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Description

the underside of the cover and the base of the censer each with a six-character seal mark (2)


Width 11⅝ in., 29.5 cm

Acquired in California in the 1980s.

Recorded and illustrated in Huangchao liqi tushi [Illustrated Precedents for the Ritual Paraphernalia of the Imperial Court], the present lot belongs to a group of bronze sacrificial vessels that are specified to be placed at the center of an altar table in a Confucian temple. Of 18 volumes and completed in 1759, Huangchao liqi tushi [Illustrated Precedents for the Ritual Paraphernalia of the Imperial Court], was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor to record and document Qing imperial regulations with the first two volumes dedicated to sacrificial vessels.


See a closely related Qianlong mark and period bronze gui, from the Palace Museum, Beijing, included in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's exhibition, Recasting the Past: The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100–1900, New York, 2025, cat. no. 158.