A FINE AND VERY RARE IRON-RED GROUND BLUE AND WHITE DISH
VARIOUS PROPERTIES
A FINE AND VERY RARE IRON-RED GROUND BLUE AND WHITE DISH

JIAJING SIX-CHARACTER MARK WITHIN DOUBLE-CIRCLES AND OF THE PERIOD (1522-1566)

Details
A FINE AND VERY RARE IRON-RED GROUND BLUE AND WHITE DISH
JIAJING SIX-CHARACTER MARK WITHIN DOUBLE-CIRCLES AND OF THE PERIOD (1522-1566)
The small dish is of shallow form resting on a short foot. It is finely painted within the well in purplish-blue cobalt with two Buddhist lions either side of a central beribboned brocade ball with auspicious treasures, zabao scattered around the well contained within double-line borders encircling the well and rim. The reverse is similarly decorated with four further Buddhist lions. The decoration is reserved on a vibrant tomato-red ground.
4 7/8 in. (12.5 cm.) diam., box
Provenance
A Japanese private collection

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Angela Kung
Angela Kung

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Lot Essay

The theme of gamboling Buddhist lions is frequently seen on late Ming ceramics but usually less finely rendered. Compare two slightly smaller dishes in the British Museum decorated with the same decorative motif but omitting the zabao, decorated in green enamel on an iron-red ground, illustrated by J. Harrison-Hall, Ming Ceramics, London, 2001, p. 256, nos. 9:95 and 9:96. Another single dish of the same pattern, also with green enamel on an iron-red ground in the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco is illustrated by He Li, Chinese Ceramics. A New Comprehensive Survey, London, 1996, no. 457. The decoration on these three examples is much looser and less controlled than on the present dish.
Although a lot of experimentation took place with different colour combinations during the Jiajing period, the visually very pleasing combination of underglaze blue and iron-red is surprisingly rare and few extant examples are recorded.

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