2040
A RARE ZITAN WAISTLESS 'FOUR-CORNER'S FLUSH' SIDE TABLE, SIMIANPING
PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE MIDWESTERN COLLECTION
A RARE ZITAN WAISTLESS 'FOUR-CORNER'S FLUSH' SIDE TABLE, SIMIANPING

17TH/18TH CENTURY

细节
A RARE ZITAN WAISTLESS 'FOUR-CORNER'S FLUSH' SIDE TABLE, SIMIANPING
17TH/18TH CENTURY
With three-panel top set within the thick, rectangular frame above plain aprons fitted flush against legs of square section joined by humpback stretchers and terminating in hoof feet, the wood of attractive grain and rich, lustrous tone
33¾ in. (85.6 cm.) high, 42 in. (106.6 cm.) wide, 21 in. (53.2 cm.) deep
来源
Grace Wu Bruce, Hong Kong, 1995.
出版
Grace Wu Bruce, Ming Furniture, Hong Kong, 1995, no. 3.
Sharon Leece and Michael Freeman, China Style, Hong Kong, 2002, p. 59.

荣誉呈献

Christopher Engle
Christopher Engle

拍品专文

The simianping, or 'four-corner's flush' form, is amongst the most attractive forms found in Chinese furniture construction. It relies on the simplicity of its lines and figure of the wood for its beauty, and the present table is a superb example of this successful combination. It is also a surprisingly durable form, although extant examples, particularly in zitan, seem to be quite rare. Furniture of simianping form is likely derived from the earlier method of box-construction, and it became a much revered form during the Ming dynasty. For an illustration of a Song dynasty prototype of this form, see Special Exhibition of Furniture in Chinese Paintings, The National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1996, pp. 50-1, no. 19. Compare, also, a huanghuali table of similar form and size, sold by Christie's, New York, 17 September 2008, lot 157, where it was also dated to the 17th/18th century.