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A FINE YELLOW-GLAZED PORCELAIN BOWL Qianlong six-character seal mark and of the period image 1
A FINE YELLOW-GLAZED PORCELAIN BOWL Qianlong six-character seal mark and of the period image 2
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Lot 31

A FINE YELLOW-GLAZED PORCELAIN BOWL
Qianlong six-character seal mark and of the period

15 September 2025, 09:00 EDT
New York

Sold for US$21,760 inc. premium

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A FINE YELLOW-GLAZED PORCELAIN BOWL

Qianlong six-character seal mark and of the period
Thinly potted, the deep rounded sides rising from a straight ring foot, covered in an even layer of rich egg yolk-yellow glaze, the inside of the foot ring and the base glazed with a colorless glaze, setting off the six-character seal mark in underglaze blue.
5in (12.7cm) diam; 2 1/2in (6.4cm) high

Footnotes

清乾隆《大清乾隆年製》篆書款 黃釉碗

Provenance:
From a Private Southern California Collection
Bonhams Los Angeles, 17 December 2019, Lot 18
From a Private Connecticut Collection

With the original business card of the gallery in Peking where the bowl was acquired during the early 20th century.

來源:
私人南加州收藏
洛杉磯邦瀚斯,2019 年 12 月 17 日,拍品編號 18
康涅狄格州私人收藏

附有 20 世紀初收購該碗北京畫廊的原始名片。

Yellow glazes with rich and lustrous surfaces are often regarded as 'Imperial yellow' and were used as a color on porcelain vessel from the Ming dynasty, as early as during the Xuande reign. Yellow glazes during the Ming and Qing dynasties were either applied directly to the pre-fired body, which achieved richer and warmer tones, or on top of a high-fired glaze which results in an even and smooth appearance. 'Imperial yellow' wares were particularly prized given that Qing regulations accorded this color only for the Emperor, Empress or Dowager Empress. So important was the color yellow, such wares were also designated for rituals conducted by the Emperor at the Altar of Earth.

It is rare to find bowls of this relatively small size, see another Qianlong marked bowl of very slightly smaller size (4 7/8in diam), sold at Christie's New York, 13-14 September 2012, lot 1522. See also an earlier Kangxi marked example illustrated by Regina Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, vol. 2, London, 1994, p. 230, no. 893.

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