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Untitled Document
The Chinese Snuff-Bottle.
THE Chinese snuff-bottle corresponds to the European snuff-box, and flourished
at about
the same period. The Chinese used a bottle with a stopper to which a small
spoon was
attached; with this the snuff was extracted. As the pocket was unknown in China,
this
method of carrying the fragrant powder had obvious advantages. A box is kept
automatically shut in a pocket; in the capacious Chinese sleeve it might easily
fall
open. The bottle, with its narrow stoppered mouth, is a safer container. European
snuff-
boxes, in porcelain, gold, crystal or tortoiseshell, are often technical triumphs,
but
their fine detail does not lend itself to colour reproduction. The Chinese,
with their
passion for flowers, seem to have concentrated on colour-effect in making
small
objects. Collecting Chinese snuff-bottles is like making an indoor flower garden,
in
miniature; nor is it a very much more costly hobby than growing flowers. If
one is
content to do without the more obviously precious materials one can make
a charming
group of these little objects at an average price of two or three pounds each,
and I
have myself bought choice specimens for a pound or less. Glass and porcelain
bottles are
still relatively cheap and can be bought even from London dealers, most of
whose stock
is far beyond the reach of many people; and they can still be found in antique
shops in
country towns from which many small pretty things, such as Battersea enamels,
coloured
glass paper-weights or small china animals, have long disappeared. But one
thing is
quite certain: the present supply will have to last us indefinitely, for
the hope of
new arrivals from the East, which were once of weekly occurrence, is now reduced
by
world events to nothing. For instance, the pretty bottles made of glass and
painted
inside will never be produced again,

1 to 4. Ivory snuff-bottles, finely undercut and tinted in
various colours. 5. Amethyst: a rare specimen. 6. Enamelled porcelain in relief,
Ch'ien-
lung period (A.D. 1736-1796). The delicately seeded green ground is here seen
at its
best. 7. Rock crystal: a graceful bottle well hollowed out. Some bottles are
hardly
bottles at all, but mere blocks into which a hole has been bored. All the examples
illustrated in this article are from the collection of Sir Noel Arkell
and are about
two-thirds actual size.

8. A fine example of shape adapted to material. The angular form
exactly suits the marking of the agate. 9. A bold piece of interior painting:
an
unusually large bottle. 10. Mutton-fat jade with a poem engraved on one side.
Coral
stopper set in ormolu. Ch'ien-lung period. 11. A lovely piece of agate carved
in
delicate low relief. 12. Porcelain: one of the grasshopper bottles, delicately
enamelled
and perhaps all the work of one artist. Some are dated, and the type seems
to be about a
hundred years old, or a little more. 13. One of the choicest ivory bottles
in the
collection. Other examples of this style are known, but it was a speciality
of snuff-
bottle makers and does not appear in other forms. Inlaid with red and black
lacquer.
Ch'ien-lung period Porcelain in high relief with enamelled details.

This style began as early as K'ang-hsi, but the enamels here used are of the
famille-
rose variety, which succeeded the typical famille-verte style of the K'ang-hsi
period
(1662-1722). 15. Compare No. 13. 16. Ivory: perhaps adapted from a form used
originally
for seals; a very rare type of ivory bottle, reminiscent of a Japanese netsuke.
17. Porcelain with decoration in blue and underglaze copper-red, a technique
unknown in
Europe, where the underglaze red colour has never been successfully used. The
subject is
The Eight Horses ofMu Wang. 18. An especially good example of the cameo glass
in two
layers; the top one is red on a transparent basis. The relief-work is beautifully
rounded. 19. Porcelain decorated in overglaze red (iron-red) and gold. The
colour is
here exquisitely shaded. This effect was never attained in the earlier versions
of the
Red Dragon design, the first known examples of which (only two specimens have
so far
been seen) date back to the Hsuan-te period (A.D. 1426-1435). In a fine bowl
of this
early version the dragon, as here, had only four claws; it had originally five,
but each
fifth claw was removed, to disguise the fact that it was an Imperial piece
stolen from
the Palace Collections. Few snuff-bottles have five-clawed dragons.

20. Opaque
white
glass with plum-blossom in black. The glass in this two-layer type is carried
out as in
a cameo, not moulded and applied later. 21. Carved red lacquer. The classic
period for
this work is the Yung Lo period (1403-1425) of Ming. Some of the finest pieces
of this
early Chinese work are now in Japan, where they have always been prized. Though
the'carved red lacquer was successfully made in Japan, the gold-powdered work
of Japan
was never perfected in China. No gold lacquer snuff-bottles exist. 22. Porcelain
of
a beautiful ivory-like white moulded in high relief. This style at its best
is one of
the most effective decorations and is peculiar to snuff-bottles

23. A beautifully adapted marking in some form of agate. 24. An especially
fine piece of
porcelain with "flambe" glaze, rhjs glaze was first perfected in
the Yung-cheng period
(1723-1735). This specimen is marked, not with a date, but with words meaning "precious
jewel." The bluish passages in these glazes are due not to added colouring
matter, but
to opalescence, a phenomenon of light-dispersal similar to that which makes
cigarette-
smoke look blue in certain lights and brown or white in others. 25. An agate
bottle
forming an effective contrast to No. 23. 26. An eagle pouncing on its prey:
carved cameo
agate. The relief is lower than in the black-and-white alass bottle (20) because
the
glass-maker could be lavish with his material, while the hard-stone carver
had to adapt
a carefully sought layer of black which he found in an otherwise pure white
piece. 27. A
well-distributed marking of the stone here produces a cloudy effect. 28. A
good
example of the delicate colour effects sometimes obtained with layered materials.

29. A
bold, effective marking. The agate bottle is beautifully hollowed out and is
so
transparent that the spoon can be faintly seen through it. 30. A piece of amber
with
markings like jasper. 31.A beautifully adapted piece of hard-stone

32.A remarkable piece of stone of the composite variety sometimes
used in
European snuff-boxes and called pudding-stone. The Chinese artist has here
managed to
avoid the look of plums in a cake by choosing a piece with one or two very
large
circular markings which look almost artificial, though they are not. 33.A specimen
of
cloisonne enamel. This technique has a long history in China, going back at
least to the
middle of the 15th century. Good examples in snuff-bottle form are rare. 34.A
piece of
jade of delicate marking and beautiful thin-sided bulbous form, with a long
poem
engraved on one side of it. It has a green jade stopper. 35. A leaf-shaped
bottle in
pure lapis-lazuli: one of the rarest stones used in snuff-bottles. 36.—A
very rare
bottle of fine colour in which red predominates: probably a kind of jasper.
37. A very
rare shape with a square top, instead of the usual rounded button; the shape
is
suggested by a bag with the mouth drawn in, made of leather. These satchels
are
occasionally seen, but as a snuff-bottle form the effect is most uncommon.
The flat form
has prevented the inside from being hollowed out completely

for, whereas glass paper-weights can be imitated after a fashion under modern
conditions, these bottles depend for their making not on any technical
ingenuity but on
inherited artistic skill. Those with landscapes in faint colours with
a verse of
poetry, for instance, have until lately been undeservedly disregarded,
but it is safe
now, unfortunately, to say that they will never be repeated. Various theories
are still
current as to how these glass bottles were painted inside. The opening of the
mouth of
the bottle seems too small for the introduction of a brush, and it has been
suggested
that an inner bulb was made and then painted in enamel colours which were fired,
and
that the whole bulb was then enclosed in another layer of glass. The European
glasses
produced in the 18th century in Bohemia with gold designs enclosed between
two layers
of glass seem to some degree to supply an analogy.
But I myself remain convinced at present that the work was actually done by
introducing
small brushes through the mouth
and so painting the inside, because in the collection of my late father,
S. D.
Winkworth, was an agate bottle with interior painting. Obviously this can have
been done
only by the skilful manipulation of small brushes. What seems extraordinary
is that
quite good calligraphy could be done like this. Many examples are to be seen
with
clearly written inscriptions and poems. A captious critic might perhaps claim
that
Chinese snuff-bottles are unconnected with the long history of country house
collecting, and lack those associations which make heirlooms socially
respectable,
while the mere purchase from shops or sale rooms of Chinese curios may seem
a capricious
luxury. One does not find Chinese snuff-bottles in old collections like those
of Ham
House, Syon or Uppark; they are absent from the cabinets of Hampton Court as
much as
from those of country seats and manor houses, the glories
of which so often adorn the pages of COUNTRY LIFE. The reason for this is
that the
snuff-bottle does not seem to have become an article of general use in China
as early as
the 17th century, from which most of the Chinese and Japanese objects at Hampton
Court
may be dated. They might indeed be thought to fall into the same category as
the
Japanese lacquer and metal work referred to in some comparatively recent articles
by the
well-known naturalist and collector, Collingwood Ingram. Such things can be
made
interesting to country gentlemen by their association with natural history
and travel,
but most of them nearly all, in fact found their way to these shores only in
the latter
part of the last century, and few can be claimed, if indeed any can, as the
inheritances
of old families or the characteristic ornaments of ancient and dignified houses.
This
may be a mere accident; the smaller sorts of artistic objects tend to escape
notice more
than fine furniture, porcelain
38. A glass bottle painted inside of the type referred to by Mr. Soame Jenyns
in his
Chinese Export Art. 39. A coral bottle. This material was seldom used for bottles,
on
account of the difficulty of finding a thick enough branch. It is extremely
rare. 40.
An amber bottle with especially beautiful markings. 41. A monkey on a horse
flying from
a fantastic monster: a clever use of accidental variations of colour in agate.
42 and
43. Two contrasted types of the hair-crystal variety of quartz; very closely
matted
hairs and very sparse ones are equally rare and desirable.

or things of obvious intrinsic
value are likely to do. We know that small swords and daggers from Japan
sometimes
reached Europe as early as the late 17th century; they are seen in 17th-century
Dutch
still-life paintings. No snuff-bottle has received such honour, but there are
instances
of snuff-bottles mounted in 18th-century gold cage work, like the rare glass
scent-
bottles of "London jewellers' work" which were formerly ascribed
to Bristol. It is known
that lacquer inro, or medicine-cases, were occasionally in the possession
of non-
Japanese in quite early times; a letter in the Will Adams correspondence is
evidence of
this, in the early years of the 17th century; but no inro and no Chinese snuff-bottle,
with one possible exception, can at present be traced to the ownership
of a resident of
these islands before quite recent times, when the great 19th-century collections
of
Hart, Behrens, Hawkshaw and Gilbertson were formed. This one exception is still
not
quite certain, and seems to depend largely on my memory. About twenty-five
or thirty
years ago a number of snuff-bottles were exhibited in the British Museum in
the King
Edward the Seventh galleries. One of these was of the interesting type in which
glass is
used to imitate a precious substance. This was a common practice with the Chinese
snuff-
bottle makers. Jade, agate and jasper were skilfully copied in glass; and in
this
particular instance the substance imitated was the curious mineral realgar.
The name is
of Arabic origin, and has associations with alchemy; the mineral was known
to Pliny. "It
usually occurs," we are told, "in association with the yellow arsenic
sulphide,
orpiment." We are already in the world of mineralogy with Norman Douglas,
whose immense
erudition is, alas, now lost to us, while his name is remembered chiefly for
his
entertaining satires. But we have here a clue which may lead far. Mr. Arthur
Waley has
already pointed out the importance of alchemy in Chinese artistic and philosophical
history, both in his Travels of an Alchemist and elsewhere. We know that it
was an
alchemist, Bottger, who discovered the secret of porcelain in Europe, and another,
Kunckel, who invented the ruby glass associated with his name. When we find
this same
ruby glass, unknown in Europe except to Kunckel and his immediate associates
in the
early years of the 18th century, appearing in China in the form not only of
snuff-
bottles but of glass bowls, we realise that alchemy played a larger part in
the
development of technique, all over the world, than is generally thought. It
is still
uncertain how these secrets of alchemy reached China. Some of the ruby glass
bowls are
dated K'ang-hsi (1662-1722). It is not impossible that some of the ruby glass
snuff-
bottles may date from the first half of the 18th century. That the imitation
realgar
bottles may be equally old is rendered possible by the record, dependent I
admit on my
own memory, that one of them in the British Museum, seen by me thirty years
ago, was
labelled "Sloane Collection." I found, on a recent visit to the Museum,
that this snuff-
bottle was not included in the group of objects assembled to illustrate the
breadth of
Sloane's interests. I hope it will be found and Mr. Soame Jenyns, whose work
on the
associations between China and Europe entitled Chinese Export Art was recently
published
by COUNTRY LIFE, assured me of his interest in the subject and of his intention
to
search for the missing bottle. To be able to quote the name of Sir Hans Sloane
as a hero
or patron of snuff-bottle collecting would indeed set the seal of venerable
respectability on the subject. At any rate, it may be said that the Sloane
tradition
has not died out when we find such an enthusiastic country-dweller as Sir Noel
Arkell
following in his footsteps as a collector of these rare things. Snuff-bottles,
originally carried in the sleeves of their Chinese owners, are highly portable
and
wander everywhere. Some are actually still in use. They may be bought in the
London
shops which deal in snuff and they may be found in many antique shops. The
late Queen
Mary was a keen collector of them.
Their variety is endless, and is their chief charm. Porcelain, glass, semi-
precious stones, bamboo-root, lacquer and coral were all used. Ivory was a
favourite
material and so was amber. Sir Noel Arkell has himself written on the subject,
and I
shall here quote from his essay. "Snuff was introduced into China in or
about the year
1582 A.D. by the famous Jesuit missionary Matteo Ricci, who brought it from
Italy. He
presented it to the Emperor Wan Li, who in turn bestowed it on high officials
for their
own use." The essay goes on to suggest that the first snuff-bottles were
of glass. As
glass was a rare and exotic substance in China in the 17th century, this
fits in with
its use for containing a foreign drug. Snuff in China is, according to this
essay, which
is based on information from one learned in Chinese subjects, denominated by
words
pronounced bee yen, "nose smoke," and the words also embrace opium,
called "big smoke ";
tobacco is called " little smoke." COUNTRY LIFE ANNUAL, 1954 The
snuff-bottle was
unknown as an object of practical use in Japan, though as a foreign curiosity
it seems
to have been esteemed, for I possess a snuff-bottle of Chinese porcelain attached
by a
cord to a netsuke or toggle, and, still odder, an ebony bottle similarly attached
to an
ebony netsuke itself shaped as a snuff-bottle. In neither case is there the
usual spoon
attached to the stopper, and these bottles, which both have wider necks than
usual, must
have been used for carrying pills or medicine like the typical inro, which
was
universally worn in Japan in the 17th and 18th centuries. The Japanese smoked
tobacco in
very small metal pipes, but they do not seem to have used snuff at all. The
practice of
smoking was, apparently, regarded as somewhat coarse in early times, whereas
snuff seems
to have been in use among persons of elegance, perhaps because it was less
offensive to
ladies. This seems to have been a world-wide custom, with Japan 59 the only
exception;
for we know from prints that in Japan ladies also smoked the tiny Japanese
pipe. Priests
and old-fashioned people still do so in Japan, and the value of a fine brocade
tobacco-
pouch with a carved pipe-case attached may, in Japan, exceed the costliness
of the most
luxurious jade or amethyst snuff-bottle, even at the present day. The great
artist and
metalworker Natsuo, who died in 1898, himself made pipes, sometimes of gold.
Though the
Chinese undoubtedly did and do smoke pipes at times, it seems that snuff was
far more
general, and though I have seen an old Dresden porcelain snuff-box showing
imaginary
Chinese smoking pipes, I suspect that this was partly because the 18th-century
imagination was vague about Orientals, and would have thought nothing of attributing
Turkish habits to Chinese. The only literature dealing with the makers of Chinese
snuff-
bottles concerns a highly special problem about those bottles
44. An artistic example of
side painting, further improved by green handles and bands at top and bottom.
45. The
beauty of this piece of cornelian depends entirely on its delicately shaded
colour.
46. A splendid specimen of unusually well-distributed spots of bright green.
The
material is jadeite, not jade proper; in fact the popular bright green colour
here seen
does not occur in true jade, which is of a different chemical composition.
Jadeite is
actually the more valuable stone, especially for jewellery. 47. A most artistic
effect
of colour in jadeite, well compared by the owner to the tint of a pool in a
trout-stream
in chalky soil. 48. An especially fine and well-rounded piece of carving in
coral one of
the gems of the collection. 49.A very rare variety of fossil-bearing stone,
of coral
formation. This stone seems to have been especially rare and much prized in
the Far
East. There is a kind of porcelain which imitates the effect very skilfully,
made in
Japan about fifty years ago, and now almost unobtainable. It was invented by
Makuzu
Kozan

50.A mother of pearl bottle in a pale celadon colour. 51.Siamese twin bottles
with
only a film of glaze connecting the two porcelain receptacles. Compare
No. 19.
52.A fine example of the best type of porcelain bottle with its own lid; the
neck and
sides are in red and gold

which have the mark Ku Yueh Hsiian Old Moon Pavilion. These
are usually of glass, though porcelain specimens are known. The problems involved
by the
meaning of this inscription are so complicated that I shall simply refer readers
to Mr.
A. de Vere Bailey's article on the subject in the Burlington Magazine
(No. LXVII, 1935,
p. 78) and to the work of Miss Sheila York Hardy in the Transactions of the
Oriental
Ceramic Society. The Percival David Foundation at 53, Gordon Square, possesses
all the
available information; but those who wish to discover more about the makers
of snuff-
bottles will have to be content with this, and with the statement in Mr. Soame
Jenyns's
Chinese Export Art that "Later glass snuff-bottles painted on the inside
surface often
carry the names of Ma Shao Hsiian and Chi I-Chung." For those who enjoy
documentation
and historical research, the snuff-bottle offers too little material; for the
pure
collector, almost too much. One could never make a complete collection, as
one could, in
theory, make a complete collection of Rembrandt's etchings; but there is a
charm in
this absence of limit. One's limits can be self-imposed, can correspond solely
to one's
own taste. Sir Noel Arkell's collection, for instance, unlike that of Admiral
Woodwright, includes few, if any, of the pretty bottles of modern make whose
chief
interest consists in the beauty of the stone from which they are carved. Admiral
Woodwright actually sent specimens of rare stones to China and had them carved
into
bottles by craftsmen there, so it is said. The examples here illustrated are
from one of
the most carefully chosen collections now in existence, at least the equal
if not the
superior of the famous collection made by the late Mr. O. C. Raphael and bequeathed
recently to the British Museum, where it completes the early beginnings of
snuff-bottle
collecting exemplified by the specimen in the collection of Sir Hans Sloane,
who died in
1753, and whose bicentenary, as founder of the Museum, was recently celebrated.
Origional Article 1954
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