A LARGE PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE 'DAOIST IMMORTALS' BOULDER
A LARGE PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE 'DAOIST IMMORTALS' BOULDER
A LARGE PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE 'DAOIST IMMORTALS' BOULDER
A LARGE PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE 'DAOIST IMMORTALS' BOULDER
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A LARGE PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE 'DAOIST IMMORTALS' BOULDER

18TH CENTURY

Details
A LARGE PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE 'DAOIST IMMORTALS' BOULDER
18TH CENTURY
The boulder is well-carved with three robed figures, likely the three Daoist immortals Shoulao, Fuxing and Luxing, amidst a rocky landscape with pine trees and prunus. The center of the boulder features two pavilions and a flaming vessel on top of a terrace. The reverse is carved with pine trees and vines amidst rocky outcroppings. The softly polished stone is of pale greenish-white tone and has some opaque white mottling and russet coloring.
10 in. (25.4 cm.) wide, 9 in. (22.9 cm.) high, hardwood stand
Provenance
Sotheby's New York, 17 September 1998, lot 21.
The LJZ Collection, United States.
Literature
J. Johnson and Chan Lai Pik, 5000 Years of Chinese Jade, San Antonio, 2011, p. 108, no. 72.
A. Carter, The LJZ Collection of Chinese Jades, London, 2022, pp. 101-3, no. 44.
Exhibited
San Antonio, San Antonio Museum of Art, 5000 Years of Chinese Jade, 1 October 2011-19 February 2012.

Brought to you by

Vicki Paloympis (潘薇琦)
Vicki Paloympis (潘薇琦) Head of Department, VP, Specialist

Lot Essay

In China, mountains were considered the dwellings of immortals, and the reverence in which they were held can be seen in the use of mountain-form rocks as an object of contemplation on a scholar’s table, as well as in their depiction in jade and other materials such as various hardstones, bronze and porcelain in mountain-form brush rests. The examples in jade were made in various sizes, and depicted an imagined mountainous setting usually representing a retreat for scholars, their figures seen amidst the rocky landscape where gnarled trees grow, and where pavilions and temples await them. As with the present jade mountain, a mountain of comparable size in the Qing Court Collection illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures in the Palace Museum - 42 - Jadeware (III), Hong Kong, 1995, p. 86, pl. 73, depicts scholars and pavilions carved in high relief on the side of the mountain, all below a censer placed on the upper-most ledge. Although jade mountains may have depicted many of the same elements, they are completely individualistic, exhibiting the artistry and imagination of the carver.

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