A SMALL CARVED RED LACQUER CIRCULAR BOX AND COVER
A SMALL CARVED RED LACQUER CIRCULAR BOX AND COVER
A SMALL CARVED RED LACQUER CIRCULAR BOX AND COVER
2 More
PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE COLLECTION
A SMALL CARVED RED LACQUER CIRCULAR BOX AND COVER

MING DYNASTY, 15TH-16TH CENTURY

Details
A SMALL CARVED RED LACQUER CIRCULAR BOX AND COVER
MING DYNASTY, 15TH-16TH CENTURY
The flat top is decorated with a scene of three boys playing in a garden, one lighting a firecracker, one covering his ears with both hands, and the other covering his face with his sleeve, all reserved on a diaper-pattern ground. The straight sides are decorated with bands of key fret.
2 7/8 in. (7.2 cm.) diam., Japanese lacquer and wood boxes, two cloth pouches
Provenance
Baron Fujita Denzaburo (1841-1912) Collection.
Anthony Carter Ltd., London.

Lot Essay

The depiction of children in Chinese art has its roots in Buddhist beliefs influenced by Daoism. By the Tang dynasty, images of healthy children were no longer confined to religious art, but began to appear on many types of secular art as an auspicious symbol. This cheerful theme was popularized by the Southern Song dynasty court artist, Su Hanchen (active early 12th century), and continued into the Ming period, when artists adapted it to convey auspicious wishes. On the present cover, for example, the three boys are shown lighting a fire cracker, which is often associated with the wish for prosperity.

More from Important Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art

View All
View All