Lot Essay
Dishes of this pattern seem to have been popular in the Near East. One in the Art Institute of Chicago was included in the University of Chicago exhibition, Blue and White, 1985, Catalogue, no. 22, where it is noted that dishes of this type were widely exported to the Near East and that their influence can be seen in Persia, Syria and Egypt. Another of these well-traveled dishes is illustrated by John Alexander Pope, Chinese Porcelain in the Ardebil Shrine, Washington, D.C., 1956, pl. 34, fig. 29.88 and one inscribed in Farsi around the foot rim with the name of the Emperor Shah Jehan and the date corresponding to 1632 is illustrated by Peter Hardie, "China's Ceramic Trade with India", T.O.C.S., 1983-84, vol. 48, p. 19, pl. 3
Other dishes of this pattern and shape are in public and private collections, and a dish excavated in 1994 at Dongmentou, Zhushan, was included in the exhibition, Imperial Hongwu and Yongle Porcelain excavated at Jingdezhen, Chang Foundation, Taipei, 1996, pp. 152-153, no. 44
Previously sold in our Hong Kong rooms, October 31, 1994, lot 54
Other dishes of this pattern and shape are in public and private collections, and a dish excavated in 1994 at Dongmentou, Zhushan, was included in the exhibition, Imperial Hongwu and Yongle Porcelain excavated at Jingdezhen, Chang Foundation, Taipei, 1996, pp. 152-153, no. 44
Previously sold in our Hong Kong rooms, October 31, 1994, lot 54