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Dome Lamp
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Antique Lamps - A 20th century Chinese Imari Lamp
When speaking of oriental porcelain we normally associate the name "Imari" with Japan, but there is also a Chinese Imari. Production of Japanese style decoration began at Jingdezhen in the early 18th century. Jingdezhen, historically, being the great centre of Chinese porcelain production.
For over 2,000 years, Jingdezhen has been known as the Porcelain Capital of the world. Originally known as Xinpin, its name was changed when the Jingde Emperor (1004-1007) of the Southern Song dynasty, decreed all the pieces made for the Imperial court were to be marked 'made in the Jingde period’.
During the long Ming and Qing dynasties, porcelain production reached new levels of refinement and kilns were set up to cater exclusively to the need of the imperial house. The imperial porcelain was so exquisite that it was described as being "as white as jade, as bright as a mirror, as thin as paper, with a sound as clear as a bell". Today, Jingdezhen remains the national Chinese center for porcelain production.
The Japanese, circa 1700, were the first to produce the combination of enamel colours which typify the Imari pallet, underglaze blue, red and gilt, and occasionally green enamels.
Dutch traders now had a monopoly on the insatiable European demand for porcelain. The first large orders placed with the Japanese kilns at Arita by the Dutch East India Company in 1656. With trade peaking in the late 17th century It soon came to the attention of the vast Chinese Imperial kilns at Jingdezhen, that Japanese Imari porcelain was in high demand in Europe and promptly began to produce Imari wares in competition with the Japanese.
The first Chinese Imari pieces were produced during the latter half of Kangxi Emperors reign (1662-1722).with the kilns soon producing a Chinese version of the Japanese Imari style. With the establishment of large European orders, Chinese kilns slowly replaced the Japanese production in the early 18th century, particularly as social conditions in China settled down, the production of export porcelain having almost stopped with the turmoil at the end of the Ming dynasty. Now, with the full establishment of the Qing dynasty, the factories reopened around 1700 with the Jingdezhen kilns finally eclipsing the original Japanese exports.
The decoration of Chinese Imari can also include painting in the Famille Verte enamels with some of the earliest armorial services produced for the English market decorated in this manner. This first period of Chinese porcelain in Japanese Imari style is generally considered to have been produced from circa1700 – circa 1760.
The Chinese attitude to their vast legacy of art and design differs markedly from Western thinking, which tends to classify art into different historic periods, associating styles, framed in time.
The Chinese, on the other hand, tend to overlap distinctive artistic styles with no real concept of when a style began, or, if it had reached a finish date! And Chinese Imari certainly fits this concept. Chinese Imari is still produced at Jingdezhen today and examples are still decorated with devices and symbols, so ancient that few have the understanding to interpret their meaning.
The lamp illustrated is an example of this; the decoration includes the ancient “Eight Trigrams” dating to 2852 - 2737 BCE
The eight trigrams are groups of lines arranged in ranks; they form the bases of the Bagua, which is an ancient Chinese system of philosophy and divination. The symbols were and, are used as a decorative motif on many Chinese items.
A large and impressive, vintage, Chinese Imari, porcelain table lamp. The lamp of baluster shape with a domed cover. The lamp decorated in the traditional Imari palette of a rich cobalt blue and dark iron red, the palette with touches of pale salmon enamel. The overall decoration, finely gilded. The domed cover, shoulder and base of the lamp decorated in an alternating Ju’i lappet border, the central decorative subject, a rectangular, bonsai planter. The lamp mounted on a gold plated, Chinese, bronze, quatrefoil base.
Overall height (including shade) 25"/ 64 cm circa 1950 – 20th century
The Antique & Vintage Table Lamp Co specialise in antique lamp lighting with an on-line range of over 100 unique, antique lamps. Lamps are shipped ready wired for the US the UK and Australia.
For more information you are invited to visit their web site at:-
© The Antique & Vintage Table Lamp Co 2009
About the Author
Maurice Robertson, principal of The Antique and Vintage Table Lamp Co , has had a lifetime’s association with antique porcelain and pottery,with his commercial experience spaning a period of 40 years,including as a valuer to the Australian Government’s Incentive to the Arts Scheme. His long experience with antique ceramics and glass also includes dealing with leading museums and numerous international private collections. He has extended his ceramics expertise into the quality table lamps seen on the company’s site, he is well known to local and international interior designers who have included many of his table lamps in their projects and has also supplied items of national interest to the official Sydney residence of the Australian Prime Minister.
Help with growing an aloe plant from the seed; Can I use a heat lamp?
I got one of those aloe kits where you grow the plant from the seed in a little rock planter with a sprouting dome. The instructions say to keep the planter in bright light. Well it's gonna be really cloudy and rainy here for the next week or two, and I was wondering if a heat lamp would be okay to use or would it be too harsh on a growing aloe seed?
You don't need to concern yourself with light until the seed sprouts and by then you should be okay. They don't need that much light every single day. I keep mine in the window with a northern exposure so it never sees bright light and it's doing fine.
Michaelle Jean leaves 'em smiling after tour of Timmins
On her first ever visit to Timmins, Her Excellency Governor General Michaëlle Jean appears to have made a positive impression on those she met here, just as the people in Timmins seem to have made a lasting positive impression on her.
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