A RARE BLUE AND WHITE AND QINGBAI-GLAZED ‘DRAGON’ BOWL
A RARE BLUE AND WHITE AND QINGBAI-GLAZED ‘DRAGON’ BOWL
A RARE BLUE AND WHITE AND QINGBAI-GLAZED ‘DRAGON’ BOWL
A RARE BLUE AND WHITE AND QINGBAI-GLAZED ‘DRAGON’ BOWL
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Property from the Dawentang Collection
A RARE BLUE AND WHITE AND QINGBAI-GLAZED ‘DRAGON’ BOWL

JIAJING SIX-CHARACTER MARK IN UNDERGLAZE BLUE WITHIN A DOUBLE CIRCLE AND OF THE PERIOD (1522-1566)

Details
A RARE BLUE AND WHITE AND QINGBAI-GLAZED ‘DRAGON’ BOWL
JIAJING SIX-CHARACTER MARK IN UNDERGLAZE BLUE WITHIN A DOUBLE CIRCLE AND OF THE PERIOD (1522-1566)
5 ½ in. (14.2 cm.) diam.
Provenance
Sold at Sotheby’s London, 19 July 1928, lot 73
Bluett & Sons, London, no. 4297
Collection of Cecil Mercer Woodbridge, acquired from the above on 13 September 1928
Sold at Sotheby’s London, 8 May 1951, lot 23
Collection of R.H.R. Palmer
Sold at Sotheby's London, 28 May 1968, lot 89
Sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 31 October 1995, lot 378
Literature
Chinese Ceramics from the Dawentang Collection, Vol. I, Hong Kong, 2019, pp.208-211, no. 33
Exhibited
The Oriental Ceramic Society of Hong Kong, Divine Power: The Dragon in Chinese Art, Hong Kong, 11 February – 31 October 2012, cat. p.69
Hong Kong Museum of History, The Radiant Ming 1368-1644 through the Min Chiu Society Collection, Hong Kong, 2015, cat. no. 44

Lot Essay

The bowl is well painted in soft tones of blue depicting two four-clawed dragons pacing through clouds and flames above a border of upright lappets. The interior is of pale celadon tone and incised with scrolling lotus encircling a lotus medallion.

The current bowl is very rare with incised decorations on the interior and covered with a pale celadon glaze, while the exterior is painted with slender dragons typically seen on Jiajing imperial porcelains, but with four claws instead of the usual five claws. This suggests the bowl was made for a high-rank nobleman from the princely peerage, possibly a brother or cousin to the emperor. Compare, for example, to a Jiajing-period bowl decorated with underglaze-blue dragons of similar style to the current bowl, and inscribed on the base with the mark 'Jin Fu shang yong', suggesting it was made for the Princely State of Jin, included in the exhibition Kingly Wares: Porcelain for Ming Princely Households, Jingdezhen, 18 October 2021-28 February 2022.

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