A RARE YELLOW-GLAZED BEEHIVE WATERPOT

Details
A RARE YELLOW-GLAZED BEEHIVE WATERPOT
KANGXI SIX-CHARACTER MARK IN UNDERGLAZE BLUE AND OF THE PERIOD

The domed body decorated in soft, low relief with three foliate dragon roundels beneath a glaze of pale lemon-yellow tone stopping at the edge of the slightly everted and white-glazed mouth rim and in a line just above the foot
5in. (12.7cm.) diam.

Lot Essay

It is very rare to find waterpots of this form glazed in anything other than a peachbloom glaze

Compare the closely related yellow-glazed Kangxi beehive waterpot exhibited in Elegant Form and Harmonious Decoration, June 10-September 10, 1992, Percival David Foundation, London, Catalogue, no. 117

Other variants on the more usual peachbloom glaze include the rare apple-green-glazed waterpot, with incised medallions, sold in our London rooms, June 5, 1995, lot 187; a Kangxi white-glazed waterpot with raised gui dragon medallions included in the exhibition, The Wonders of the Potter's Palette: Qing Ceramics from the Collection of the Hong Kong Museum of Art, November 2, 1984-January 6, 1985, Hong Kong, Catalogue, no. 28. Another white-glazed waterpot with a Kangxi mark and raised medallions is illustrated by John Ayers in Chinese Ceramics, The Koger Collection, London/New York, 1985, no. 139