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Bottling up their talent

By Yang Feiyue | China Daily | Updated: 2023-07-22 08:27
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Li Shaoyue's painted snuff bottles feature themes such as human images and landscapes. CHINA DAILY

Evolution of the craft

The development of snuff bottles was closely related to interior painting, says Zhang Guangqing, a national arts and crafts master.

During the late Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), Matteo Ricci, an Italian missionary, presented snuff as a tribute to Emperor Wanli. In the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), the nomadic lifestyle of the Manchu people, who traveled on horseback, made snuff even more popular.

As a result, snuff bottles became a symbol of the aristocracy. However, with the rise of tobacco, snuff seemed to have, well, snuffed it.

But a surprising turn of events happened when the snuff bottles gradually lost their practical value. The aristocrats started to see them as playthings and added some bells and whistles, hence inside-painted snuff bottles coming into being.

"Interior painting once relied on a bamboo brush dipped in pigments, making it difficult to control the thickness of lines and variations in solidity," Zhang says.

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