Incense Burner
Item number 2988/3 a-b from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number 2988/3 a-b from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Cloisonné enamel lidded incense burner decorated with a dense design of flowers and scrolling leaves on a turquoise ground, with cartouches containing Arabic inscriptions in the Chinese style of calligraphy on a pale turquoise ground.
Incense has a significant presence in devotional life throughout the Muslim world, and these implements were intended for use with aromatic resins, like benzoin and fragrant wood that was burnt on charcoal.
This incense set was probably made in Guangdong Province in southern China. The set comprises a lidded incense burner, round box and cover, along with a vase and spatula. A related set is in the Museum of Asian Art, University of Malaya, Kuala Lampur, Malaysia.
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Incense has a significant presence in devotional life throughout the Muslim world, and these implements were intended for use with aromatic resins, like benzoin and fragrant wood that was burnt on charcoal.
This incense set was probably made in Guangdong Province in southern China. The set comprises a lidded incense burner, round box and cover, along with a vase and spatula. A related set is in the Museum of Asian Art, University of Malaya, Kuala Lampur, Malaysia.
Cloisonné enamel lidded incense burner decorated with a dense design of flowers and scrolling leaves on a turquoise ground, with cartouches containing Arabic inscriptions in the Chinese style of calligraphy on a pale turquoise ground.
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