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Snuff Bottle

19th century
Lu Jun (Chinese, active 19th century)

Snuff-made of tobacco that is ground into a powdered form and spiced with aromatic substances-was introduced to China from Japan in the late seventeenth century. Chinese elites believed that the powder had medicinal properties, and initially used cylindrical medicine bottles to hold this new "Japanese tobacco." Soon after, the Kangxi Emperor (reigned 1662 - 1722)-known for his fondness for snuff and a devoted patron of the arts-established a series of workshops in Beijing to manufacture small, high-quality objects for court use, including snuff bottles. The repertoire of bottle shapes, materials, and motifs dramatically expanded under imperial patronage, and artisans facilitated the dispensing of the tobacco by adding stoppers with attached ivory spoons.

Snuff bottle production reached aesthetic and technological heights during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor (1736 - 1795), who particularly appreciated the artfulness of the miniature containers. Members of the Qianlong court frequently exchanged the exquisite receptacles as gifts, and by the mid-nineteenth century, snuff bottles had become mandatory items of apparel for Chinese gentlemen and those who aspired to this status. The popularization of these vessels helps account for the many glass bottles produced to resemble jade, agate, quartz, lapis lazuli, and other precious materials: glass snuff bottles were less expensive and a good imitation passed all but the closest scrutiny. Chinese interest in snuff bottles as collectibles continued into the twentieth century, when delicate, inside-painted wares dominated the market.

The poetic inscription by this artist can be translated as: It is like tobacco but not tobacco; it has flavor but no flavor. Casually taking a pinch with our hands, you and I take a sniff while gazing at each other. For the appreciation of the master of the Modest Studio by Lu Jun.

During the nineteenth century, scholars with an interest in the craft of snuff bottle decoration could obtain ready-made coconut-shell bottles to inscribe their own poetic compositions. Many such bottles are adorned with archaic symbols or scripts, indicating the makers’ knowledge of ancient Chinese culture.

Object Details

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