Thank you very much for master class at the start of the weekly show. It is great help to novice collectors who rarely come across real good old pieces to compare with new ones.
Thank you for this great teaching. My learning since childhood has come from visits to the San Francisco Asian Art Museum, and I'm forever greatful to see such beautiful works of art.
I have a Maitland Smith designed and handmade In Thailand I believe is a ginger jar? I cannot find a similar design wondering what it is worth? Can I please get help?
Bukowskis has two Asian sales a year. June and December. And the mouth of the vase was smashed, and really bad repaired. The inside did look like they have used tippex/scotch brite. /Regards from Stockholm Sweden.
You know what is interesting about that vase and why the price is high, the seller has been selling off I think his father estate recently and a lot of it actually looks authentic and some interesting items, including some Japanese stuff, a real mixed bag of stuff to say the least.
Mark on bottom is 21th c new mark. The way people face and trees, mountain rendered show the painter has been trained for western style shaded sketch technic. This technic was adapted by Chinese in 20th century. Not 19th c. Vase. It is a 21th c. Copy of Qianlong vase.
Thank you very much Peter for your clarifying explanation! The vase of the example has had unusual aspects from the begining as was noted on the General Discussion Forum under the title Odd Ebay Auction where, among other things, it was commented that on its previous Ebay listing the seller was also using pictures of another similar but not the same flower vase.
If my memory serves me right, the same seller "Cherepok" sold a same or very similar Qianlong mark 19C vase not long ago. I have reservation about the seller's item, in particular he/she is also selling a Xuande mark and period bowl at the moment. I don't think the items look convincing.
Thank you very much for master class at the start of the weekly show. It is great help to novice collectors who rarely come across real good old pieces to compare with new ones.
Thank you for this great teaching. My learning since childhood has come from visits to the San Francisco Asian Art Museum, and I'm forever greatful to see such beautiful works of art.
The comparison of the top portions of the vases really gets your point across to an amateur like me. Obvious difference in quality.
Thank you, Peter. It’s alway a pleasure to watch your videos 🙏🏻
Thank you so much Peter!🙏💙
Thanks Peter always learning...
Awesome intro to the video with the vase comparison!!! Thank you very much from Spain Sir!!👏👏👏
Thank you peter...I love it al
Peter, thanks so much for your hard work ❤❤❤ Love this kind of educational video, if you can please more of these at times 😊
Excellent! Thank you Peter.
26:06 beautiful 😍 vase
"A fool and his money will soon be parted" 😂 great start!
I have a Maitland Smith designed and handmade In Thailand I believe is a ginger jar? I cannot find a similar design wondering what it is worth? Can I please get help?
Another great video! The lessons on how to identify real Chinese porcelains with the modern-day fakes is starting to sink in.
Hi Peter,
Do you have any news on the plan of doing videos of Identification Assistant requests? I enjoyed that one video of them you did a while ago.
Bukowskis has two Asian sales a year.
June and December. And the mouth of the vase was smashed, and really bad repaired. The inside did look like they have used tippex/scotch brite.
/Regards from Stockholm Sweden.
Some poor collectors like myself sometimes have to sell some good poorthings we've collected during the year to afford to buy Christmas presents!
Thank you, Peter!
You know what is interesting about that vase and why the price is high, the seller has been selling off I think his father estate recently and a lot of it actually looks authentic and some interesting items, including some Japanese stuff, a real mixed bag of stuff to say the least.
I've purchased items from mig and juice and I'm not overly impressed with their current listings
Mark on bottom is 21th c new mark. The way people face and trees, mountain rendered show the painter has been trained for western style shaded sketch technic. This technic was adapted by Chinese in 20th century. Not 19th c. Vase.
It is a 21th c. Copy of Qianlong vase.
Thank you very much Peter for your clarifying explanation! The vase of the example has had unusual aspects from the begining as was noted on the General Discussion Forum under the title Odd Ebay Auction where, among other things, it was commented that on its previous Ebay listing the seller was also using pictures of another similar but not the same flower vase.
THE JUING IS TWO FRESH THE RIM AND THE MARKS?
If my memory serves me right, the same seller "Cherepok" sold a same or very similar Qianlong mark 19C vase not long ago. I have reservation about the seller's item, in particular he/she is also selling a Xuande mark and period bowl at the moment. I don't think the items look convincing.
Dear Peter, it’s Aguttes not Auguttes.
Sorry about that, it's been corrected I just noticed it too;..