拍品专文
Cranes, as symbol of longevity, were a popular motif on Chinese ceramics. The design on the present jar known as 'hundred cranes', was therefore particularly auspicious. Reserve-decorated design was a feature of mid-Yuan and Xuande wares, but it fell from use during the later 15th century and early 16th, and became popular again in the Jiajing and Wanli periods, particularly those of birds and floral motifs.
A similar jar is in the collection of Shanghai Museum, illustrated by Lu Minghua in Studies of the Shanghai Museum Collections, Ming Dynasty Ceramics, p. 57, fig 1-75. Compare also to two similar jars in private collections, one was included in the Exhibition of Ancient Chinese Ceramics from the Collection of the Kau Chi Society of Chinese Art, Hong Kong, 1981, Catalogue, no. 88, the other was included in Enlightening Elegance: Imperial Porcelain of the Mid to Late Ming, The Huaihaitang Collection, Hong Kong 2012, Catalogue, no. 121. Another example was sold at Christie's New York, 15 September 2009, lot 351.
A similar jar is in the collection of Shanghai Museum, illustrated by Lu Minghua in Studies of the Shanghai Museum Collections, Ming Dynasty Ceramics, p. 57, fig 1-75. Compare also to two similar jars in private collections, one was included in the Exhibition of Ancient Chinese Ceramics from the Collection of the Kau Chi Society of Chinese Art, Hong Kong, 1981, Catalogue, no. 88, the other was included in Enlightening Elegance: Imperial Porcelain of the Mid to Late Ming, The Huaihaitang Collection, Hong Kong 2012, Catalogue, no. 121. Another example was sold at Christie's New York, 15 September 2009, lot 351.