A VERY RARE REVERSE-DECORATED BLUE AND WHITE BOWL AND COVER
From time to time, Christie's may offer a lot whic… 顯示更多
清雍正 藍地白花魚藻紋鳳鈕蓋盌 蓋:三行六字楷書款 盌:雙圈三行六字楷書款

YONGZHENG SIX-CHARACTER MARKS IN UNDERGLAZE BLUE AND OF THE PERIOD (1723-1735)

細節
清雍正 藍地白花魚藻紋鳳鈕蓋盌
蓋:三行六字楷書款
盌:雙圈三行六字楷書款
注意事項
From time to time, Christie's may offer a lot which it owns in whole or in part. This is such a lot.

榮譽呈獻

Michael Bass
Michael Bass

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拍品專文

The decoration and form of this bowl and cover find their inspiration in earlier blue and white wares of the Yuan and early Ming dynasties, and exemplify how potters during the Yongzheng and Qianlong periods revised revered designs to suit contemporary taste. The unusual technique of using raised, slip-decorated designs from earlier periods reserved in white against a dark blue ground was developed in the Yuan dynasty (see Jingdezhen chutu Yuan Ming guanyao ciqi, Beijing, 1999, pp. pp. 70-1, nos. 6-7, for a Yuan jar and cover and an ink palette and cover decorated with dragon designs in this technique), but was employed with greater frequency during the Xuande period on a variety of vessel forms, as can be seen on several Xuande-marked examples illustrated op. cit., pp. 242-4, nos. 234-8, where nos. 234-6, a stem bowl, a bowl and a dish, respectively, are decorated with very similar scenes of four fish swimming amidst water weeds and lotus plants. The form of the present bowl and cover is based on Xuande-period prototypes typically decorated with underglaze blue designs of lotus scroll, the Eight Buddhist Emblems, floral sprays, and dragons chasing flaming pearls, such as those in the National Palace Museum illustrated in Catalogue of the Special Exhibition of Selected Hsuan-te Imperial Porcelains of the Ming Dynasty, Taipei, 1998, pp. 154-67, nos. 50-6.
A very similar Yongzheng-marked bowl and cover of this design, in the collection of G. de Menasce, was included in the exhibition Arts of the Ch'ing Dynasty, T.O.C.S., vol. 35, 1963-64, pl. 46, no. 116. A similar Yongzheng-marked bowl, but lacking the cover, formerly in the Grandidier Collection, and now in the Musée Guimet, Paris, is illustrated in Oriental Ceramics, The World's Great Collections, vol. 7, Tokyo, 1981, no. 166. A Yongzheng-marked bowl and cover of this form, but completely covered on the exterior in underglaze blue and lacking the white-slip decoration, was sold in our London rooms, 18 June 2002, lot 69.

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