A MOTHER-OF-PEARL-INLAID BLACK LACQUER BARBED DISH
A MOTHER-OF-PEARL-INLAID BLACK LACQUER BARBED DISH

MING DYNASTY, 16TH CENTURY

Details
A MOTHER-OF-PEARL-INLAID BLACK LACQUER BARBED DISH
MING DYNASTY, 16TH CENTURY
The interior decorated with four elegant ladies standing beneath a willow tree in a lush gated garden with bamboo and rockwork below dense composite floral scroll in the petal-lobed well, the exterior with nine leafy S-shaped scrolls
9 7/8 in. (25 cm.) diam., wood box

Lot Essay

Compare the mother-of-pearl-inlaid black lacquer octagonal dish of petal-lobed outline decorated with a related scene of ladies in a garden, as well as with a similar floral scroll border, and dated to the second half of the 16th century, illustrated by Watt and Ford, East Asian Lacquer: The Florence and Herbert Irving Collection, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1991, pp. 135-6, no. 60. The dating of the Irving dish is based on its similarity to other dishes of this type, all of which have "pictorial designs that correspond to woodblock prints of the Wanli" period. The authors also discuss the openwork cutting of the shell inlay and how it appears to be typical of the period.

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