A RARE AND FINELY CARVED CINNABAR LACQUER CONICAL 'PEONIES' BOWL
A RARE AND FINELY CARVED CINNABAR LACQUER CONICAL 'PEONY' BOWL

MING DYNASTY, 15TH CENTURY

Details
A RARE AND FINELY CARVED CINNABAR LACQUER CONICAL 'PEONY' BOWL
MING DYNASTY, 15TH CENTURY
The bowl is of conical shape supported on a narrow foot rising to wide flaring sides. The exterior is thickly carved through layers of red lacquer to the yellow ground with peony blossoms and buds borne on leafy stems. The interior and base of the bowl are applied with silver liners.
4 5/8 in. (10.8 cm.) diam., Japanese wood box
Exhibited
The Museum of East Asian Art, Cologne, 1990, Dragon and Phoenix, Chinese Lacquer Ware, The Lee Family Collection, Catalogue, no. 49 The Shoto Museum of Art, Shibuya, Japan, 1991, Chinese Lacquerware, Catalogue, no. 57

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Lot Essay

The shape of this bowl is fashioned after the Northern Song Ding conical bowls, usually covered in ivory-white or black glaze and bound by metal rims. See for example a black-glazed Ding bowl from the Percival David Collection, now housed at the British Museum, and illustrated by Stacey Pierson, Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art: A Guide to the Collection, London, 2002, no. 22.

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