Description & Technical information
European Market
A pair of famille rose porcelain candleholders modelled as standing maidens, each perched on a dragon, the backs flattened and with apertures for wall mounting.
This form is a rare adaptation of the usual type, both as a wall pocket and also because of the inclusion of the dragons, though the heads of these also resemble the qilin heads in some export models.
The dragon is a male symbol (yang), connected to the east and the light, and adopted as a symbol of imperial authority. Dragons are rare in export porcelain figures, usually appearing as attachments to other objects, such as handles on vases.
The first dragon rose out of the sea, appearing before the sage Fu Xi and filling a great hole in the sky made by another monster; thus a dragon controls the weather and the seasons.
Date: 1760
Period: 18th century, Qianlong period
Medium: Chinese porcelain
Dimensions: 37 cm (14⁵/₈ inches)
Literature: References: Cohen & Cohen 2018, p100 a similar pair; Godden 1979, p242, No 167, a similar pair illustrated.
Categories: Oriental and Asian Art

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Chinese Export Porcelain, 17th & 18th Century, Works of Art
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