A RARE FINELY-MOLDED SANCAI-GLAZED POTTERY GLOBULAR TRIPOD JAR AND COVER
A RARE FINELY-MOLDED SANCAI-GLAZED POTTERY GLOBULAR TRIPOD JAR AND COVER
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE AMERICAN COLLECTION
A RARE FINELY-MOLDED SANCAI-GLAZED POTTERY GLOBULAR TRIPOD JAR AND COVER

TANG DYNASTY (AD 618-907)

Details
A RARE FINELY-MOLDED SANCAI-GLAZED POTTERY GLOBULAR TRIPOD JAR AND COVER
TANG DYNASTY (AD 618-907)
The rounded body is applied with crisp stellate-form rosettes alternating with pairs of elaborate scrolls, and is raised on three claw feet. The ridged cover has a small pointed knop, and the censer and cover are covered overall with an attractive splashed sancai glaze.
6 3/8 in. (16.2 cm.) high
Provenance
The Property of a Gentleman; Christie's New York, 22 March 1999, lot 252.
Literature
The Tsui Museum of Art, Chinese Ceramics I: Neolithic to Liao, Hong Kong, 1993, no. 130.

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Olivia Hamilton
Olivia Hamilton

Lot Essay


The present tripod jar and cover is a particularly fine example, with finely-molded appliques and well-controlled splashed colors in the sancai glaze. Another finely-executed jar, also with a cover, was included in the exhibition Cina a Venezia. Dalla Dinastia Han a Marco Polo in 1986, and is illustrated in the Catalogue, Milan, 1986, p.189, no, 99. Another jar and cover of comparable quality is illustrated by Liu Liang-yu, Early Wares. Prehistoric to Tenth Century, Taipei, 1991, p. 213.

A sancai-glazed pottery tripod jar with very similar molded floral appliques, but of smaller size (13.3 cm. high), from the Dexinshuwu Collection, was included in The Special Exhibition of Tang Tri-Colour, National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1995, p. 139, and subsequently sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 4 October 2016, lot 3. A sancai-glazed tripod jar and cover with similar appliques was sold at Christie's New York, 14-15 September 2017, lot 1107; and a sancai-glazed tripod jar and cover without appliques, from the collection of Frederick A. and Sharon L. Klingenstein, was sold as Christie's New York, 13 September 2019, lot 834.

Tripod jars with smaller appliques and without covers have also been exhibited in museums: one is illustrated in Mostra d'Arte Cinese, Venice, 1954, p. 102, no. 237; one from the collection of Howard C. Hollis is illustrated in The Arts of the Tang Dynasty, Los Angeles, 1957, no. 197; a third example is illustrated in An Exhibition of Noted Chinese Ceramics, Japan, 1992, p. 24, no. 12.

The result of Oxford Authentication Ltd. thermoluminescence test no. C199b20 is consistent with the dating of this lot.

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