We found 29400 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 29400 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
29400 item(s)/page
NO ONLINE BIDDING ON THIS LOT. This is a premium Lot. In order to bid on this, please contact the auction house to obtain and complete a registration form, and provide the necessary deposit. This is the only way bids will be accepted on this Lot. A Chinese rhinoceros horn "river landscape" libation cup (Qing dynasty - Kangxi period circa 1700), of a dark toffee tone, finely carved with three immortals and an oarsmen in a small river craft navigating a mountainous river gorge, the rocky banks scattered with wutong and pine trees, a small pagoda to the reverse, the interior of the cup with over the rim pine branches, 7ins (17.7cm) x 4.5ins (11.5cm) x 4.5ins (11.5cm) high Note: Please be aware that according to CITIES Regulations, it will be necessary to acquire an export licence to export this lot outside the EU. Buyers intending to export this lot should also ascertain whether there is any further specific prohibition on the exporting/importing of goods of this character according to their country or state of residence. Please note that a CITIES export licence will only be granted for carved Rhinoceros horn specimens when the hammer price meets or exceeds the value of $100 USD per gram of the object's weight.
A small collection of Chinese porcelain, including - a "Kangxi" blue and white plate decorated with stylised flowers and concentric circle to base, 10.5ins diameter (27cms) a "Famille Rose" bowl enamelled with figures in a garden landscape, 8ins diameter (20cms) x 3.5ins high (9cms) and five other items and an 18th Century English Delft blue and white plate, 9ins (22.8cm) diameter
Four late 19th & early 20th Century Chinese export blue and white ginger jars, two with covers, three with prunus decoration, another with cartouches of birds perching upon branches, the largest example approximate height 18.5 cm Provenance: one is accompanied by a letter from the British museum dated 1983 which declares that it's Kangxi mark is spurious, yet it is considered a 19th Century example. (4) all have various imperfections, firing flaws and interuptions to the glaze,
PLEASE NOTE Republic period NOT Kangxi, A Chinese blue and white bottle vase, Kangxi period, the bulbous body painted with scholar's objects and a four character inscription, the neck with squirrels amid vines, H. 17.2cm, wood standProvenance - Mr Keel, purchased from China Art House, 155 Orchard Road, Singapore, 30 November 1957.
PLEASE NOTE Republic period NOT Kangxi, A pair of Chinese blanc de chine seals, Kangxi period, each surmounted by a lion-dog, H. 8cm, fitted box Provenance - The owner and her family lived in Singapore in the late 1950s. The collection includes antique Chinese porcelain, jade and furniture her father bought from shops in Orchard Road, Singapore around 1955-59.
Two small Chinese blue and white jars, Kangxi period, the first of globular form painted with two ladies and a boy in a rockwork garden, the base with artemisia leaf mark, the second a baluster jar with a band of lotus flowers and scrolling leaves mounted with a late 19th century silver filigree work cover and 'double lotus' stand, the inside of the cover, engraved 'Nellie 1896' H. 9cm and 10cm
A Chinese blue and white bowl, 16th/17th century, painted with fruit, 'shou' and scrolling tendrils, the base with six character mark, 'Shen De Tang Bo Gu Zhi' (Made in the Antique style for the Hall of Cultivation of Virtue), D. 20.3cm, hairline cracksCompare a near indentical underglaze blue painted bowl but with a coral ground sold by Christie's, New York, The Collection of Evelyn Annenberg Hall: Fine Chinese, 29 March 2006, Lot 100, ascribed to the 16th/17th century.The high foot and deep sides of this bowl are probably inspired by Jiajing-period imperial bowls. The mark, shen de tang bo gu zhi, translates to ‘Made in the antique style for the Hall for the Cultivation of Virtue’. This hall mark appears on porcelains from the early Kangxi period and on imperial porcelains from the Daoguang period. The Hall of Mental Cultivation is a building in the inner courtyard of the Forbidden City in Beijing, China. The Hall was first built in the Ming dynasty and reconstructed in the Qing dynasty. From the 18th century onward, since the reign of the Yongzheng Emperor, the Hall became the living quarters of the Qing dynasty emperors.

-
29400 item(s)/page