A TIANQI LACQUER ALTAR TABLE
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A TIANQI LACQUER ALTAR TABLE

KANGXI PERIOD (1662-1722)

Details
A TIANQI LACQUER ALTAR TABLE
KANGXI PERIOD (1662-1722)
The table with a rectangular top panel decorated with various antiques and auspicious objects, including archaic bronzes, ceramic vessels with branches of fruit, and flowers in vases and wicker baskets, all on a ground of repeated geometric key patterns, the openwork apron carved with archaistic scrolls, the spandrels similarly carved, the two flattened mallet-shaped legs with openwork scroll designs and detailed with a gilt floral diaper ground and a leafy meander on the sides
30 in. (76.2 cm.) high; 49 3/8 in. (125.4 cm.) wide; 21 3/8 in. (54.3 cm.) deep
Special notice
VAT rate of 20% is payable on hammer price and buyer's premium

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Lot Essay

The technique tianqi, known as 'lacque cuir' in French or 'leather lacquer', involves the building up of layers of lacquer over wood covered in hemp cloth. Each layer is left to dry and then polished down; once thick enough the design is incised on the surface and these areas are outlined with gilt and filled in with lacquers of various colours including tones of red ochre, green, black and brown. This extremely time-consuming technique would have been expensive and such furniture, such as the current lot, would therefore have been for the Qing elite.

Compare the similar free style of decoration on the top of the stool-table formerly in the C.T. Loo Collection illustrated in Michel Beurdeley, Chinese Furniture, New York, 1979, p. 113, no. 154. See also comparable tables with tianqi lacquer in the Palace Museum, Beijing, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Furniture of the Ming and Qing Dynasties, Hong Kong, 2002, nos. 91 and 104.

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