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Chinese Celadon "Fangge" Vase / Meiping Shape with Crackle Glaze/ "Chengua" Mark/ Circa Late Qing - Early Republic 1890-1920's

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Asian Antiques7685 of 10167Indonesian Rosewood Ebony and Ivory inlaid coffee table. Late 19th Century?Ivory Buddha
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    Posted 11 years ago

    mikelv85
    (1232 items)

    I'm always hoping for another really nice authentic piece of Chinese porcelain. The fact is most of these pieces are purely decorative. Gotheborg's site says the brown etched marks were used from about the 19th to the early 20th centuries. Some may be earlier but seem rare. Most are late 20th century Chenghua Nian Zhi meaning: "Chenghua Period Made" and are just part of a piece's decoration. There's always that bit of doubt so I check with the experts on the Asian art forum just to be sure. It's a nice piece in a pale crackled green glaze. I love the 9 1/2 " "Mei Ping" shape. Very elegant ! -Mike-

    NOTE: Finally got an opinion from " Collecting" chinese-antique-porcelain.com. Peter said "This is a Fangge vase with a badly written "Chenghua" mark. As the bottom is the only thing that can be used for judging age with this otherwise undecorated vase, we can only assume that it is late Qing dynasty (1644 to 1912) or Early Republic (1912-1928)"..... So it's not really old (turn of the century) or extremely valuable but it is authentic and not a reproduction. -Mike-

    Gotheborg.com
    Incised Brown and Etched Marks

    Exactly when this kind of mark first started to be used is actually not known. Traditionally the "Guangxu" period (1875-1908) is given as the starting point, and that assumption has been followed by us in suggesting dates for individual pieces here and on other places on this site.
    When looking for reference pieces of porcelain it seems like the feature of adding brown etched sections or borders to the enamel decoration begins at the earliest during the Tongzhi 1862-74 period. From this period I have seen vases with enamels and broad bands of brown etched decoration in the shape of roof tiles, adding a three dimensional aspect to the decoration.

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    Comments

    1. Vintagefran Vintagefran, 11 years ago
      This is Lovely Mike.
    2. mikelv85 mikelv85, 11 years ago
      Thanks, Vintagefran.... I hope it's a real antique. Still waiting to hear from the experts. -Mike-
    3. Scubatart, 11 years ago
      I love this vase, I have a very similar one but with two five clawed embossed dragons facing what can only be described as flames and pearls, the mark on the bottom is very clear and precise, not sure where to get this looked at though ?
    4. mikelv85 mikelv85, 11 years ago
      Hi Scubatart and Thank you :)... I use the Asian Art Forum and the 20th Century forums. They both have experts that can look at pieces for you.I also use Gotheborg.com site for checking marks. Asian marks are most often part of the decoration so they're not 100% reliable, but they are a start.
      -Mike-
      Here's the links:

      http://www.asianart.com/phpforum/index.php

      http://www.20thcenturyforum.com/
    5. apostata apostata, 5 months ago
      well , i can,t cope with Peter, same conclusion , different angle , the depthness of embedding , the discongruency in the square, the scribble ware , well i know chengua marking a lot , but never seen this , this way, corrosion seems sound

      Normally they won,t do peanuts , but this is highly underestimatad, because this is a meiping crackle,thats a lot of compensation seems sound, congrats

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