1952
A MAGNIFICENT AND VERY RARE PAIR OF LARGE IMPERIAL ZITAN CORNER-LEG ALTAR TABLES, TIAOZHUO
A MAGNIFICENT AND VERY RARE PAIR OF LARGE IMPERIAL ZITAN CORNER-LEG ALTAR TABLES, TIAOZHUO
A MAGNIFICENT AND VERY RARE PAIR OF LARGE IMPERIAL ZITAN CORNER-LEG ALTAR TABLES, TIAOZHUO
A MAGNIFICENT AND VERY RARE PAIR OF LARGE IMPERIAL ZITAN CORNER-LEG ALTAR TABLES, TIAOZHUO
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清乾隆/嘉慶 御製紫檀雕獸面龍紋條桌一對

QIANLONG/JIAQING PERIODS (1736-1820)

細節
紫檀木製,案面攢框裝數板,邊緣浮雕回紋。面下高束腰,腰間浮雕雲蝠紋,下承蓮瓣紋一周。牙條正中垂窪堂肚,雕如意雲紋組成獸面。角牙鏤雕夔龍紋。直腿方馬蹄足,飾回紋。

本對桌用料講究,製作費用不菲,為有著錄的同類紫檀雕龍紋長條桌中最大型,亦是罕見的存世成對例子。其他例子見2006年北京出版《故宮博物院藏明清宮廷家具大觀‧上》,圖229、231。另見一件雕花卉紋長條桌,其形制、牙條上勾雲紋、垂蓮瓣框均與本對桌近似,同上書,圖225。

長條桌一般靠牆陳設,北京故宮翠雲館西梢間西牆陳設一張近似的紫檀長桌,中間放西洋鐘,兩側放四輪底托盤,載於2002年香港出版故宮博物院藏文物珍品大系《明清家具‧下》,圖版263號。

榮譽呈獻

Nick Wilson
Nick Wilson

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拍品專文

This pair of long tables appears to be part of a group of imperial zitan tables elaborately carved with kui dragon at the spandrels, and the tables stand out as the longest among other comparable examples published. Two smaller examples from the Palace Museum are illustrated by Hu Desheng in Ming Qing gong ting jia ju da guan, vol. I, Beijing, 2006, pp. 209 and 211, nos. 229 and 231. See another zitan long table which shares the same designs of cloud scrolls and lotus lappets found on the current tables, op. cit., p. 207, no. 225.

It is very rare to find massive furniture made of zitan wood and as such the production cost would have been considerable. Zitan wood became a very expensive commodity by the early Qing period since the trees dwindled dramatically from excessive lumbering activities throughout the Ming dynasty. The scarcity was compounded by the fact that these trees are slow growing and required centuries to fully mature into usable material. Although local sources of zitan exist in the southern provinces of Yunnan, Guangdong and Guangxi, much of the material was imported from Southeast Asia. As an imported material, at the imperial workshops zitan wood was scrupulously monitored and carefully restricted.

This type of long table was usually placed against a wall in a palace room to display decorative objects as depicted on court paintings. An example still in situ inside the Cuiyunguan, the Hall of Green Cloud, is illustrated in Furniture of the Ming and Qing Dynasties (II), The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Hong Kong, 2002, pl. 263.