When people say “antique Chinese incense burner,” they’re usually picturing a lidded tripod xianglu (censer) used on home altars or in temples. In real estate finds, you often see the bottom half only: a heavy brass bowl with handles (sometimes dragons), a footring or three feet, and a stamped or cast mark on the base.
With the lid missing, these pieces are frequently repurposed as decorative bowls or planters. That doesn’t automatically make them modern —but it does change the collector market. Intact, signed, high-quality bronzes trade in a different tier than incomplete brass examples.
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What you’re looking at: censer, planter, or “incense burner base”?
Many Chinese censers were designed as lidded forms. If you only have the bowl, it may be:
- The bottom of a lidded censer (lid lost over time).
- A bowl-form censer made without a lid (common in later export and decorative markets).
- A decorative brass bowl borrowing censer motifs (dragons, archaistic bands) for export décor.
Value comes from workmanship, age, and buyer demand—not from the label “incense burner” alone. Missing lids typically reduce value, but they don’t automatically make an item worthless.
Identification checklist (5 minutes on a table)
Start with construction before you obsess over marks. You’re looking for consistency: do the materials and finishing choices match the story the object is trying to tell?
1) Casting and finishing
- Older cast brass/bronze usually shows hand-finishing: subtle file marks and uneven wear where hands touched it.
- Modern decorative castings often have crisp, repeated texture and uniform “antiquing” in recesses.
2) Weight and wall thickness
Many modern bowls are thin and light. Antique examples (even brass) often feel dense for their size. If the walls ring like sheet metal, it may be later decorative ware rather than a cast censer.
3) Handles and feet
Dragon handles are common. What matters is attachment. Integral handles are a better sign than obvious modern screws or bright solder lines. Repairs happen, but they should be disclosed when selling.
4) Interior evidence
True censers often show heat-related wear: darkening, ash residue in pores, and micro-pitting. A perfectly clean, uniformly polished interior doesn’t prove it is modern, but it can suggest decorative use.
Brass vs bronze (and why green corrosion appears)
Collectors often say “bronze censer” for any yellow-to-brown metal. Technically, brass is copper + zinc (often more yellow) while bronze is copper + tin (often redder/browner). Both are copper alloys and both can develop green corrosion (copper salts/oxides) when exposed to moisture, salts, or acidic plant soil.
If your bowl was used as a planter, small green patches are unsurprising. They don’t automatically mean “ancient,” but they do confirm copper alloy content as expected. Avoid aggressive polishing before selling—buyers use patina as an age clue and polishing can highlight repairs.
Interpreting the base mark (and common misunderstandings)
Many Chinese metalwork pieces carry reign-style marks (for example “Xuande” or “Qianlong”). A crucial nuance: marks are often honorific and were copied for centuries. A Xuande mark does not guarantee a Ming dynasty date.
When a mark looks modern (very uniform font, shallow stamping, or unfamiliar symbol), it can indicate later manufacture—often early 20th century or export décor. Some later marks can still be legitimate foundry/workshop marks.
- Wear consistency: does the mark show similar wear/oxidation as surrounding metal?
- Placement: centered within a recessed base vs randomly stamped.
- Photos: take a straight-on photo plus raking light close-ups.
Appraisal value range (typical late 19th–early 20th century brass bowls)
For a typical antique Chinese brass incense burner base/bowl with no lid and a non-imperial mark, a reasonable market range is:
- US$80–$120 if the piece is sound, decorative, and has appealing casting/handles.
- US$30–$80 if heavily cleaned, dented, repaired, or used as a planter with active corrosion.
- US$150+ if larger/heavier, with stronger dragons, better casting, or clearer period character.
Three recent comps from our “censers” auction dataset show what everyday Chinese bronze/brass censers have been bringing:
- Wealthier Art & Auction (Sep 28, 2024), lot 6126: “Two Chinese Bronze Censers” — US$30 hammer.
- International Auction Gallery (Sep 23, 2024), lot 115: “2 Chinese bronze censers” — US$45 hammer.
- Ahlers & Ogletree Inc. (Oct 10, 2024), lot 500: “Pair Chinese bronze Buddhist guardian lion censers” — US$150 hammer.
Your bowl can land above or below those figures depending on size, condition, and how convincingly it reads as antique Chinese work rather than generic export décor.
How to sell it safely (online works best)
Because these objects are heavy and commonly misidentified, selling online usually gives you the widest buyer pool. eBay and Etsy are common for decorative examples; regional auction houses can also work well when you have multiple Asian décor items.
- Photograph the base mark, handles, interior, and profile in natural light.
- Disclose missing lid and any repairs.
- Pack for weight: double-box, protect handles, and prevent movement inside the box.
If you sell locally, meet in a public place. If you ship, use insured service and declare value accurately. If a buyer’s behavior seems suspicious, it’s better to decline.
Search variations people ask
These are common questions collectors search while identifying Chinese brass censers and incense burner bowls:
- how to identify an antique Chinese incense burner bowl
- what does a Xuande mark mean on a brass censer
- is my Chinese brass bowl an incense burner base
- value of antique Chinese brass censer without lid
- how to date Chinese bronze incense burners by mark
- how to clean an antique brass censer without ruining patina
- dragon handle Chinese censer bowl appraisal value
- green corrosion on brass bowl is it bronze disease
Each question maps to the inspection steps and valuation guidance above.
References
- Example of a lidded Chinese brass bowl-form incense burner (reference listing)
- Example of censer bowls repurposed as planters (reference listing)
- Guide: taking good photos for online listings
Wrap-up
For most “incense burner bowls” found without a lid, the safest approach is a practical one: document construction, photograph the base mark clearly, preserve patina, and price against comparable everyday censers—not against museum-grade bronze burners.