Lot 116 , A Chinese blue and white ‘Zhong Kui’ inscribed bottle vase, early Kangxi period, hairline cracks to neck and inside edge of foot
A Chinese blue and white ‘Zhong Kui’ inscribed bottle vase, early Kangxi period, painted with Zhong Kui holding a sword while riding a mythical beast, leading a demon holding a plum blossom branch, between rockwork and the inscription ‘Fú cóng tian jäng xi yöu qí lái’ (Fortune comes from heaven, happiness has no age limit), the neck with zigzag border, the base with four character mark ‘shi jin tang zhi’ (Hall of the Splendid Tapestry of Generations), 22.8cm high,
cf. similar depictions of Zhong Kui found on a scroll painting dated 1650, by Lu Xue, accession No.1910,0212,0.520 and on a Suzhou woodblock colour print dated to the Kangxi period, accession No.1964,0411,0.10, both in the British Museum. hairline cracks to neck and inside edge of foot
£600-800
Condition:
The vase has a hairline crack extending approximately 37mm down the neck. Typical minor glaze imperfections and some fine scratching to the glaze in places, there is a small like hairline crack curving across the unglazed edge of the foot, otherwise in good condition with no restoration or chips detected.
Sold for £12,000