A CARVED DINGYAO 'DUCKS' BOWL
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A CARVED DINGYAO 'DUCKS' BOWL

NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY (960-1127)

Details
A CARVED DINGYAO 'DUCKS' BOWL
NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY (960-1127)
With shallow rounded sides rising from a very short foot ring, freely carved in the interior with two ducks swimming amongst reeds and sagittaria, the exterior with characteristic glaze 'tear stains', the unglazed rim bound in metal, rim cracks
9¼ in. (23.4 cm.) diam.
Provenance
Sir John Figgess, KBE, CMG
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

This is a classic Ding ware bowl, with all the features of fine Ding wares from the Northern Song period. It is well potted with a fine-textured white body and clear, ivory-toned glaze including the characteristic 'tear stains' on the exterior. The low foot is well cut and bears the finger nail mark of the potter who held the foot while dipping the bowl into the vat of glaze. The decoration of a pair of ducks on a pond with aquatic plants is fluently incised with some of the major lines of the design being emphasised through the use of double parallel lines. The decorative theme of a pair of ducks was a very popular one in China, especially in association with weddings. A pair of ducks symbolise fidelity, and if they swim on a lotus pond the message is extended, since one of the Chinese words for lotus is pronounced he, which is a homophone for harmony.

Two Ding bowls decorated with a scene depicting a pair of swimming ducks, and of the same size and similar shape as the current bowl are in the collection of the National Palace Museum, Taipei (see Catalogue of the Special Exhibition of Ting Ware White Porcelain, National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1987, nos. 44 and 46). A similarly sized Ding bowl with a design of a pair of swimming ducks, formerly in the Eumorfopoulos Collection, is now in the collection of the Percival David Foundation (see M. Medley, Illustrated Catalogue of Ting and Allied Wares, Percival David Foundation, London, 1980, p. 17, no. 33). A Ding ware bowl of similar shape, size and decoration is in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago (illustrated in Masterpieces of Chinese Arts from the Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka, 1989, p. 79, no. 67). This bowl, formerly in the collection of Lucy Maud Buckingham, entered the Chicago collection in 1924.

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