ANTIQUE 19thC CHINESE EXPORT SOLID SILVER BOWL, WANG HING c.1880
Antique 19th-century Chinese export solid silver bowl, featuring a taditional design and intricate high-relief decoration on a finely tooled background. The bowl showcases various scenes, depicting nobility and battle scenes set in a landscape. It is made with a heavy gauge and exhibits exceptional craftsmanship by one of the period's most skilled silversmiths. The base is hallmarked with Chinese export marks (acid tested shows 900+ standard), Retailed by WH (Wang Hing).
Reference Number: A10292
Antique 19th-century Chinese export solid silver bowl, featuring a taditional design and intricate high-relief decoration on a finely tooled background. The bowl showcases various scenes, depicting nobility and battle scenes set in a landscape. It is made with a heavy gauge and exhibits exceptional craftsmanship by one of the period's most skilled silversmiths. The base is hallmarked with Chinese export marks (acid tested shows 900+ standard), Retailed by WH (Wang Hing).
Reference Number: A10292
Antique 19th-century Chinese export solid silver bowl, featuring a taditional design and intricate high-relief decoration on a finely tooled background. The bowl showcases various scenes, depicting nobility and battle scenes set in a landscape. It is made with a heavy gauge and exhibits exceptional craftsmanship by one of the period's most skilled silversmiths. The base is hallmarked with Chinese export marks (acid tested shows 900+ standard), Retailed by WH (Wang Hing).
Reference Number: A10292
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Probably the greatest and finest Chinese Export retailer, Wang Hing started trading in Canton soon after 1842 when, with the end of the First Opium War and the treaty of Nanking, China opened its ports to foreign merchants and Hong Kong became a British colony.
Wang Hing was the trading name chosen by the Lo family who established the business and passed it down for generations until 1941. Although we don’t have any information about the founder of the company, we know that the Lo family was a wealthy merchant family living in one of the richest and buzzing areas of Canton, the district of Xiguan.
Thanks to the fine quality of the pieces and to the entrepreneurial abilities of the family members, the reputation of the firm grew and in 1920’s Lo Hung Tong, grandson of the founder, opened a shop at 10 Queen’s Road, Hong Kong and in Shanghai. Wang Hing artworks became very popular among Western clients, who often commissioned trophies and presentation pieces decorated with the traditional Chinese motifs such as dragons, bamboo leaves and prunus blossoms. In 1941 with the Japanese invasion, the Lo family was forced to flee to mainland China and the business ceased trading.
CONDITION
In Great Condition - Wear expected with age. Please refer to photographs.
SIZE
Height: 8 cm // 3.15 in
Diameter: 17 cm // 6.69 in
Weight: 450 g // 15.87 oz