AN EARLY MING BLUE AND WHITE EWER
AN EARLY MING BLUE AND WHITE EWER

YONGLE (1403 - 1425)

Details
AN EARLY MING BLUE AND WHITE EWER
yongle (1403 - 1425)
The pear-shaped body painted with two quatrefoil cartouches enclosing fruiting and blossoming peaches on one side and loquats on the other, flanked by upright flower sprays on either side, the slender neck with upright serrated plantain leaf-band above a lotus scroll, the arched strap handle with five lingzhi sprays and a loop, the tapering spout attached to the neck with a cloud-strutt and painted with scrolling tendrils, all supported on a low foot with classic scroll band, spout and handle with restoration, crackles to body
10 in. (26.6 cm.) high

Lot Essay

Comparable ewers with pomegranate and loquat sprays are illustrated by Pope, Chinese Porcelains form the Ardebil Shrine, pl.54, no.29.427 and Misugi, Chinese Porcelain from the Topkapi Saray Museum, vol. III, pp.156 A.78; in Underglazed Blue and Red, no.42, from the Shanghai Museum; in The Tsui Museum of Art, col. pl.64; in Selected Chinese Ceramics from Han to Qing, pl.200, col. pl.81, from the Chang Foundation; in Imperial Hongwu and Yongle Porcelain Excavated from Jingdezhen, pl178-181, nos.58-59; by Liu Liang-yu Ming Official Wares, A Survey of Chinese Ceramics, vol4, p.54.
Closely related examples, but with cinquefoil panels are illustrated in Mayuyama Seventy Years, vol.1, p.245, fig.736; in the Min Chiu Society, Thirtieth Anniversary Exhibition, 1990 Catalogue, pl.131; inLiaoning Sheng Bowuguan, pl.180; and in the Zhonggue Meishu Quanji, Arts and Crafts, vol.III, pl.69. Two other ewers painted with peach and pomegranate branches enclosed within cinquefoil panels include the example sold in our New York Rooms, 2 December 1985, lot 234 and the example sold in our Hong Kong Rooms, 18th March 1991, lot 520.

The present example uses double-lines to form the quatrefoil panels while others use triple-lines and form a cinquefoil cartouche. The presence of studs at the base of the handle and shape of the mouth are Hongwu features suggesting an early Yongle date. The fruit sprays which are always fruiting loquat and peaches are not always distributed as in the present example, but occur swapped from side to side. It is notable that the design of fruit in panels appears to be the only pattern that the Qing potters copied.

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