A HUANGHUALI RECESSED TRESTLE-LEG TABLE, QIAOTOUAN
VARIOUS PROPERTIES
A HUANGHUALI RECESSED TRESTLE-LEG TABLE, QIAOTOUAN

QING DYNASTY, 17TH CENTURY

Details
A HUANGHUALI RECESSED TRESTLE-LEG TABLE, QIAOTOUAN
QING DYNASTY, 17TH CENTURY
The solid single plank on top with 'ice-plate' edge and everted ends above plain, beaded aprons and stylised phoenix-form spandrels, all supported on beaded legs framing trestle panels carved in openwork with descending confronted chilong set into shoe feet
32 1/4 in. (82 cm.) high x 80 3/4 in. (205 cm.) wide x 17 5/8 in. (44.5 cm.) deep
Provenance
An American private collection

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Aster Ng
Aster Ng

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Lot Essay

Compare this example with a jichimu qiaotouan formerly from the Museum of Classical Chinese Furniture Collection illustrated in Wang Shixiang et al., Masterpieces from the Museum of Classical Chinese Furniture, Hong Kong, 1995, pp. 112-3, no. 53, and sold at Christie's New York, 19 September 1996, lot 59; and again at Sotheby's New York, 14 September 2011, lot 126. Compare also a qiaotouan with very similar phoenix spandrels exhibited in at the Hong Kong Museum of Art, In Pursuit of Antiquities, Thirty Fifth Anniversary Exhibition of the Min Chiu Society, Hong Kong, 1995, illustrated in the Catalogue, no. 242; and a pingtoauan with phoenix spandrels illustrated by G. Wu Bruce, A Choice Collection, Chinese Ming Furniture, Hong Kong, 2011, pp. 98-99. A huanghuali table in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts with more elaborately carved phoenix spandrels is illustrated by R. Jacobsen and N. Grindley in Classical Chinese Furniture in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Minneapolis, 1999, no. 42.

Refer to S. Handler's article, "Side Tables, a Surface for Treasures and the Gods," in Chinese Furniture: Selected Articles from Orientations, 1984-1999, Hong Kong, 1999, pp. 200-9, where she discusses the role of this type of table, both as a side table as well as a domestic altar table.

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