Artist Unknown

Snuff Bottle

  • 1911-1925
  • glass
  • Presented by Mr Yeung Tat Che
  • 47 x 40 x 40mm
  • 98/29.1-2

Snuff bottles were used to contain powdered tobacco, which was often combined with aromatic spices. Snuff-taking was regarded as a remedy for headaches, colds and stomach complaints and was widely used in Europe by the time it was introduced to China in the mid-sixteenth century. In Europe, snuff was stored in small boxes, but the Chinese designed bottles to keep the powder dry and fragrant in humid conditions. These were decorated, some elaborately, and the patterns and motifs used could be symbolic, sometimes conveying a special message between a giver and recipient. The small bottles were easy to hold in a hand or pocket and came in a variety of shapes, some representing vegetables and fruit, others animals, human figures or simple geometric forms. Typical materials included glass, lacquer, metal, jade, ivory and coloured gemstones. This bottle, with flowers painted in enamel over a glass bottle in the ‘pressed orange’ shape is one of 44 presented to the Gallery by Mr Yeung Tat Che in 1998.

(Turn, Turn, Turn: A Year in Art, 27 July 2019 – 8 March 2020)

Exhibition History

earlier labels about this work
  • QIANLONG mark (GUYUEXUAN) Enamel onn glass. Painted flower. Pressed orange shape. Gold metallic stopper.