A RARE PAIR OF FINELY PAINTED WUCAI 'FISH' DISHES
THE PROPERTY OF A JAPANESE COLLECTOR
清康熙  五彩魚藻紋盤一對  雙方框《在川知樂》楷書款

清康熙

細節
五彩魚藻紋盤一對  雙方框《在川知樂》楷書款
來源
Peter Boode Esq., sold at Sotheby's London, 13 November 1972, lot 188
S. Wilkinson
Important Chinese Ceramics and Jades from the Jingguantang Collection, sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 5 November 1997, lot 875
出版
The Tsui Museum of Art, Hong Kong, 1991, pl. 111
The Tsui Museum of Art, Chinese Ceramics, vol. IV, Hong Kong, 1995, pl. 127

榮譽呈獻

Aster Ng
Aster Ng

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拍品專文

Wucai decorated fish dishes first appeared during the Ming Dynasty, Jiajing period, a variation on the classic design found on large jars of this period. The related, more simplified prototype for the design on the present Kangxi dishes, can be found on a Jiajing marked dish in the Percival David Foundation, London, illustrated by S. Pierson, Designs as Signs: Decoration and Chinese Ceramics, London, 2001, p. 17, no. 7 where the fish motif is discussed in detail. A number of dishes of the same design decorated to the same exacting standard and inscribed with the four character mark Zaichuan Zhile can be found in several museum collections including two in the Palace Museum, Beijing, one illustrated in Porcelains in Polychrome and Contrasting Colours, The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, vol. 38, Hong Kong, 1999, p. 146, no. 134 and the other illustrated in Gu tao ci ziliao xuancui, vol. 2, Forbidden City Press, 2005, no. 69; another from the Shanghai Museum is illustrated in Zhongguo Taoci Quanji - Jingdezhen caihui ciqi, vol. 21, Japan, 1981, no. 70; compare also one in the Percival David Foundation, London, illustrated in Ming and Ming Style Polychrome Wares, Revised Edition, London, 2006, p. 61, no. A797. An identical pair of dishes originally sold at Christie's London, 12 December 1977, lot 206, is illustrated in Chinese Ceramics from the Gulexuan Collection, Germany, 2003, pp. 138-139, no. 106. Another pair of dishes of the same size and design was sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 11 April 2008, lot 2966.

Kangxi dishes of the same design are also found with apocryphal Jiajing reign marks, such as the example in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, illustrated in the exhibition Catalogue, Good Fortune, Long Life, Health, and Peace: A Special Exhibition of Porcelains with Auspicious Designs, Taipei, 1995, p. 148, no. 71.

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