A Large Dated Tileworks Tripod Incense Burner
MING POLYCHROME WARES
A Large Dated Tileworks Tripod Incense Burner

MING DYNASTY, WANLI PERIOD, DATED BY INSCRIPTION TO 1612

Details
A Large Dated Tileworks Tripod Incense Burner
Ming dynasty, Wanli period, dated by inscription to 1612
Raised on three monster mask and ruyi supports, the body boldly carved in high relief around the sides with two four-clawed dragons with scaly, sinuous bodies confronted below a black flaming pearl on the neck, with a yellow ruyi collar pendent from the upright rim incised in a panel on one side with the dated inscription, Da Mingguo Wanli si shi nian sui ci renzi ji yue zhi zao (Made in the auspicious month of the renzi cycle in the 40th year of the Emperor Wanli of the great Ming dynasty), the pair of upright handles carved with a vertical ribbed band glazed yellow between a ruyi terminal below and another overhanging the edge above
20 5/8in. (52.4cm.) high, reticulated wood cover and wood stand
Falk Collection no. 57.

Lot Essay

This magnificent censer belongs to a tradition of vigorously modeled, brilliantly glazed, large tripod censers dating back at least to the Yuan period. In 1964 a 14th century tripod censer (37 cm. high) with a dragon on one side and a phoenix on the other was excavated from the site of the Desheng Gate of the Yuan dynasty capital Dadu, modern Beijing; see Christie's Education, Treasures from Ancient Beijing, New York, 2000, p. 16, no. 5. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has in its collection a tripod censer (43.5 cm. high) with a dragon and phoenix in high relief, illustrated in Oriental Ceramics, The World's Great Collections, vol. 11, Tokyo, 1982, no. 20, which is dated by inscription to the 7th year of Zhengde, equivalent to AD 1512.

The Falk censer is even larger, 52.4 cm. high, and is dated by inscription to the 40th (renzi) year of Wanli, equivalent to AD 1612, and may be seen as the culmination of this tradition, which appears to begin sometime in the Yuan dynasty as a by-product of the tile-making industry. There was a flourishing industry making glazed architectural tiles in bright colors in southern Shanxi. Some of these tiles were for important buildings, made when the structure was under construction, when it was dedicated or when it was refurbished. In these instances an inscription was often applied to one of the tiles to commemorate the occasion. A large tile decorated in high relief in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, is of this type and bears an inscription dated to the 27th year of Jiajing (equivalent to AD 1548) and states that the tile was part of the restoration to a temple in Zhili province; see R. Scott and R. Kerr, Ceramic Evolution in the Middle Ming Period, Percival David Foundation, 1994, p. 26, no. 37. In many instances, when the temples or other important buildings were constructed or refurbished, impressive new ritual vessels were also commissioned and inscribed with the appropriate date. It is probable that the Falk censer, with its large size, splendidly modeled high relief dragons and dated inscription, was made for such an occasion.

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