Showing posts with label Antique Flask. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antique Flask. Show all posts

Monday, November 28, 2011

Retired chocolate factory worker discovers his blue and white vase is a rare 600 year old Ming dynasty moon flask worth millions!

Just a super quick update post since the folks at Chine Gallery in Hong Kong have been keeping me quite busy these days. Though with lots of cool things there to look into like this 18th century cinnabar lacquer box from Beijing can you blame me?


On to the latest “record price” headline, this one picked up from the BBC. Whats amazing is the guy walked in with the vase stuffed inside a cardboard box!!!

A blue and white Chinese Ming Dynasty vase that arrived at a Dorset auction house in a cardboard box is expected to sell for more than 1 million.

The 11.5in (29cm) vase is the largest ever recorded from a rare group of early Ming “moonflasks” from 1403-1424, Duke and Son auction house said.

The Dorchester-based firm said it was believed to be one of the most exciting works of art to come to light in years.

The seller, a retired Cadbury’s worker aged 79, does not wish to be named.

‘Spectacular find’

A Duke’s spokesperson said the man “lives modestly and has been interested in antiques for many years”.

Guy Schwinge, of Duke’s, said: “When my colleague initially showed me what had arrived in a cardboard box I could not believe my eyes.

“The vase is in perfect condition and it is amazing to think that it has survived unscathed for almost 600 years”.

Duke’s consultant for Chinese Works of Art is Anthony du Boulay, a scholar and author, who said the vase was “a spectacular find”.

View the original article here

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Blue White Porcelain Phoenix Head Flask Yuan Dynasty

A 14th Century Yuan Blue and White Phoenix Head Flask drawn with  wings of phoenix features and scrolls of flowers enhancing the beauty of the flask.



Yuan Dynasty Blue White China Porcelain


It was only during the early part of the Yuan Dynasty that the underglazed blue technique was finally perfected at Ching-te Chen, possibly with the help of potters from nearby Chi Chou who had been using the underglazed decorative technique but based on brown/black iron oxide since the Southern Sung period. From early examples of Yuan blue-and-white it would  appear that the underglazed blue technique was initially used on a Ying Ch’ing or Shu Fu type porcelain body.

View the original article here