Featured INFO ON SIGNED ANTIQUE CHINESE CARVED WOODEN BOWL

Discussion in 'Antique Discussion' started by journeymagazine, Jan 8, 2018.

  1. Asian Fever

    Asian Fever Well-Known Member

    It is a long story when we say how lacquer skill comes from. Also there's a long history for chinese use bronze in lacquerware.

    upload_2018-1-9_13-21-3.png

    This is a late West Han Dynasty bowl ware and the base is bronze. There were even bronze lacquer wares found attributes to Shang Dynasty. Bronze lacquer skills developed fast in Warring States Period (475–221 BC). And they became popular in Han Dynasty (206BC - 220 AD).
     
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  2. Asian Fever

    Asian Fever Well-Known Member

    Lacquer originally comes from lacquer tree or vanish tree. They can not only be applied on wood but also be applied on metal, cane, skin, cloth, paper, ceramic and plastic.
     
  3. journeymagazine

    journeymagazine Well-Known Member

    Actually I looked at it with a magnifying glass & I believe it is wood on the inside painted black - lacquer? - but it does have a brass ring around it's base that it sits on. Could that have been added later?
    Is this 1700s - 1800s?
    Thanks again all!
    PS - Sorry, I left part of my latest find; a 1915 Duntley floor sweeper in the photo!
    AA EBAY NEW A COLLECTIBLE EBAY BOWL CHINESE CARVED 9AA.jpg
    AA EBAY NEW A COLLECTIBLE EBAY BOWL CHINESE CARVED 8AAAA.jpg
     
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  4. Jeff Drum

    Jeff Drum Well-Known Member

    I don't think anyone thinks it is that old. Either late Qing - which lasted to 1911, or later than that in republic period. Looks like brass rim on top too, so all brass seems very likely to me, but only you can hold it to be sure.

    Check it with your magnifier for grain lines like explained in the link I gave - I don't see any and it should have them, but we can't magnify from out here.
     
  5. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    The rim looks pretty thin, looks like brass:
    [​IMG]

    Edit:
    Jeff and I were typing at the same time, and yes, late Qing. Republic Period would be nice, because of the recent demand for Republic art and wares, but this looks slightly earlier to me.
     
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  6. JayBee

    JayBee Well-Known Member

    The characters at the base are "Da Qing Qian Long Nian Zhi" (made in the year of Qian Long.) I would not bet my life on it though. My guess is that some Chinese "antiques" dealer carved that on the bottom just to fool a less informed potential buyer. The inscription looks recently "scratched" to me.
     
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  7. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    Best not to, with Chinese dynastic attributions.;) And Qianlong 'marks' are the most popular apocryphal marks.
     
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  8. Kelly Graziano

    Kelly Graziano New Member

    They look Ming to me: https://zentnercollection.com/product/ming-dynasty-chinese-pair-of-carved-lacquer-bowls/. Congratulations -- very nice!
     
  9. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    Kelly, how can it be Ming (1368-1644) when it has an apocryphal Qianlong mark on the base?
    Qianlong reigned in the 18th century, so long after the Ming dynasty ended, and with Chinese marks 'apocryphal' means it was made after the Qianlong period.
     
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  10. Asian Fever

    Asian Fever Well-Known Member

    Probably he means "MingTian(明天 tomorrow)" rather than Ming :happy::happy:
     
    Kelly Graziano and Any Jewelry like this.
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