Identification

Pair of Chinese Export Sancai-Style Foo Dog Lidded Jars

Photo reference

1 uploaded photo

Overview

These are vibrant, polychrome ceramic 'Guardian Lions' reimagined as functional lidded vessels. They feature a bold 'Sancai' (three-color) inspired palette of turquoise, iron-red, and yellow, characterized by expressive, bug-eyed faces and stylized manes.

Story

Guardian Lions have protected Chinese imperial palaces for millennia, transitioning by the mid-20th century into whimsical, highly collectible ceramics for Western interiors.

Maker / Origin

Mid-20th-century kilns in Shiwan and Jingdezhen specialized in these vibrant, expressive interpretations, prioritizing spiritual energy over anatomical realism.

Condition & Value

Because they function strictly as decorative anchors, any chipping or hairline fractures to the prominent, fragile finials severely reduces secondary market viability. The glazes appear bright and intact; however, these pieces are prone to small chips on the delicate ears, teeth, and manes.

Full Research

See what it's actually worth.

Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.

Market Analysis

Valuations in the mid-century Chinese export market are heavily bifurcated between curated retail and wholesale auction floors. A single Tang-style Sancai footed jar established a firm auction baseline when it realized $125 at Ripley Auctions. However, the ceramics market enforces strict discipline regarding sets; a true mirrored pair commands a strict premium, mathematically pushing the auction floor to $300–$500 before buyer's premiums. The user-provided documentary evidence of a $1,234 listing perfectly aligns with high-end decorator retail benchmarks, supported by comparable dealer sales on platforms like Chairish ($885 realized). To achieve the higher retail figure, the jars must survive strict condition checks for rim wear and finial restoration, and boast dimensions exceeding standard 12-inch export scale.

Value Drivers

Matched pair status (market demands symmetry for interior design applications)

Vibrant, high-contrast Sancai (three-color) glaze execution

Intact, undamaged sculptural Foo Dog finials

Substantial scale (jars exceeding 14 inches carry a notable premium)

Concerns

Lack of exact dimensions (standard 8-inch jars clear significantly lower than 15-inch palace-style jars)

Unverified condition (restoration to the fragile ears or tails of the finials heavily penalizes value)

Unverified base marks (apocryphal marks are common and must be cross-referenced with paste color)

Best Venue

A regional decorative arts auction house (e.g., Hindman or Nye & Company) for immediate liquidity, or a curated platform like Chairish to target the $1,200+ retail decorator market.

Upside Potential

If the jars are 'palace scale' (exceeding 20 inches in height) and exhibit flawless glaze with no rim fritting or finial repairs, auction value could double.

Authenticity Notice

Risk level is low for outright counterfeits, but high for misattribution. Mid-century export wares are routinely misidentified as genuine Ming or Tang antiquities. Buyers must verify the unglazed footrim paste (which should look cleanly fired and modern) and be highly skeptical of any stamped reign marks, which are almost universally apocryphal on this style of export ware.

The upgraded report is now attached to this item.