TWO RARE CHRYSANTHEMUM-SHAPED DISHES
FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE LATE VERA GOLDSCHLAGER
TWO RARE CHRYSANTHEMUM-SHAPED DISHES

Details
TWO RARE CHRYSANTHEMUM-SHAPED DISHES
ENCIRCLED YONGZHENG SIX-CHARACTER MARKS AND OF THE PERIOD

The first moulded with forty-four slender petals radiating from a plain medallion to pointed tips at the rim, the fluted convex sides correspondingly lobed, thinly covered overall with a pale celadon glaze (hairline); the other dish moulded with a slightly more rounded rim, covered with a pale green-turquoise glaze, including the base, reserving the underglaze-blue reign mark within a medallion (restored)
7 in. (17.8 cm.) diam. (2)
Provenance
The Goldschlager Collection, no. 62

Lot Essay

Chrysanthemum-shaped dishes appear in a complete series of twelve colours. The most notable set of twelve is in the Palace Museum, Beijing, illustrated in Kangxi Yongzheng Qianlong, p. 316, no. 145. Six are illustrated by Feng Xianming, Wenwu, 1984, p. 37, no. 10, where the author notes that a decree issued in the eleventh year of Yongzheng (corresponding to A.D. 1733) instructed Nian Xiyao, Minister of the Imperial Household, to send 'the twelve colours of chrysanthemum dishes one of each colour, for the inspection of the permanent guardian of the treasury and chief eunuch Samuha'. The decree further mentions 'forty pieces to be fired of every type according to the samples'. As recorded by A. W. Hummel in Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing period, vol. I, pp. 588-590, Nian Xiyao was appointed as a minister of the Imperial Household in 1726, and between 1726-1735, he was in charge of the manufacture of porcelain as well as assuming the post of superintendent of customs at Huaian, Jiangsu province.

It is interesting to compare Yongzheng period chrysanthemum dishes with those produced during the Qianlong reign, the latter have more smoothly rounded petals, considerably less pointed than those on Yongzheng period examples.

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