A RARE MINIATURE PALE YELLOWISH-GREEN AND RUSSET JADE RHYTON
A RARE MINIATURE PALE YELLOWISH-GREEN AND RUSSET JADE RHYTON
A RARE MINIATURE PALE YELLOWISH-GREEN AND RUSSET JADE RHYTON
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A RARE MINIATURE PALE YELLOWISH-GREEN AND RUSSET JADE RHYTON

SONG-MING DYNASTY (AD 960-1644)

Details
A RARE MINIATURE PALE YELLOWISH-GREEN AND RUSSET JADE RHYTON
SONG-MING DYNASTY (AD 960-1644)
The rhyton is carved with an inverted horned beast mask at the bottom, with its horns acting as feet for the vessel and the curled mane forming the handle. The upper body is decorated in high relief with a clambering chilong reserved on an archaistic scroll ground. The stone is of a pale yellowish-green tone with some russet patches.
1 ½ in. (3.8 cm.) high
Provenance
Robert H. Ellsworth (1929-2014), New York.
Anthony Carter, London, 29 March 2004.
The LJZ Collection, United States.
Literature
A. Carter, The LJZ Collection of Chinese Jades, London, 2022, pp. 72-73, no. 31.

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Vicki Paloympis (潘薇琦)
Vicki Paloympis (潘薇琦) Head of Department, VP, Specialist

Lot Essay

In China’s history, there were two major peaks of significant antiquarian interest, the first during the Northern Song dynasty, 11th-12th centuries, and the second during the late Ming-early Qing dynasty, 16th-18th centuries. See Jenny So, “Impressions of Times Past: Chinese Jades of the 12th and 17th Centuries”, The Woolf Jade Lecture, 16 March 2010, published in Transactions of the Oriental Ceramic Society 74 (2009-2010), 2011, pp. 75-88. On p. 77, So illustrates two miniature archaistic jade vessels that are dated Southern Song dynasty, a you, fig. 2a, from the tomb of Zhu Xiyan (d. 1201), Xiuning, Anhui province and a hu, from the tomb of Fan Wenhu (d. 1301), Anqing, Anhui province, as well as two vessels dated Ming dynasty or earlier, a hu in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, and a hu with cover and swing handle from the tomb of Mu Rui (d. 1609), Nanjing, p. 78, figs. 3 and 4 respectively. So proposes that “these small jade containers were produced as refined objects for private consumption, displayed as precious novelties, elegant symbols of a scholar’s link with a bygone era” and had been “treasured as ‘literati playthings (wenwan)’ to grace a scholar’s studio.”

The present miniature carving of an archaistic rhyton is evidence of this antiquarian interest, as is another similar miniature jade archaistic rhyton (1 7/8 in.) in the collection of the British Museum illustrated by Desmond Gure in “Selected Examples from the Jade Exhibition at Stockholm, 1963; A Comparative Study”, B.M.F.E.A., no. 36, Stockholm, 1964, pp. 117-58, pl. 29, fig. 1, where it is dated to the Tang dynasty. As with the present miniature rhyton, the horned-shaped vessel rises from the jaws of a makara head that forms the base while its S-shaped tail forms the handle.

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