FAUTEUIL EN HUANGHUALI ET HUALI, GUANMAOYI
FAUTEUIL EN HUANGHUALI ET HUALI, GUANMAOYI
FAUTEUIL EN HUANGHUALI ET HUALI, GUANMAOYI
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FAUTEUIL EN HUANGHUALI ET HUALI, GUANMAOYI
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Property from a European Private Collection
FAUTEUIL EN HUANGHUALI ET HUALI, GUANMAOYI

CHINE, FIN DU XVIÈME-DÉBUT DU XVIIÈME SIÈCLE

Details
FAUTEUIL EN HUANGHUALI ET HUALI, GUANMAOYI
CHINE, FIN DU XVIÈME-DÉBUT DU XVIIÈME SIÈCLE
Hauteur : 101,5 cm. (40 in.) ; Longueur : 58,8 cm. (23 1⁄8 in.) ; Profondeur : 46 cm. (18 1⁄8 in.)
Provenance
With Grace Wu Bruce, Hong Kong, 15 July 1994.
Further details
A HUANGHUALI AND HUALI YOKE-BACK ARMCHAIR, GUANMAOYI
CHINA, LATE 16TH-EARLY 17TH CENTURY

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Lot Essay

The name guanmaoyi or ‘official’s hat'-shaped chair is derived from its resemblance to the winged hat that was part of the formal attire of the Ming officials. They were regarded as high chairs and retained a connotation of status and authority associated with the elite gentry in Chinese society. The classical text Lu Ban jing [Manuscript of Lu Ban], a 15th century carpenter’s manual, gives specifications for these chairs and describes the joinery as the embodiment and fine example of Chinese furniture.

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