A PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE CARVING OF A FOREIGNER RIDING A HOBBY HORSE
A PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE CARVING OF A FOREIGNER RIDING A HOBBY HORSE
1 更多
A PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE CARVING OF A FOREIGNER RIDING A HOBBY HORSE

MING DYNASTY (1368-1644)

细节
2 5/8 in. (6.7 cm.) high, cloth box
来源
Angus Forsyth Collection, Hong Kong.
Anthony Carter, London, 27 August 2002.
The LJZ Collection, United States.
出版
A. Forsyth and B. McElney, Jades from China, Bath, 1994, no. 248.
A. Carter, The LJZ Collection of Chinese Jades, London, 2022, pp. 70-71, no. 30.
展览
Bath, England, Museum of East Asian Art, Jades from China, 11 June 1994.

荣誉呈献

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

拍品专文

The motif of a boy astride a hobby horse is frequently included in popular decorative subjects such as ‘boys at play’ and ‘hundred boys’, which appeared in the Song dynasty and remained popular through the Qing dynasty. These themes became symbolic of progeny and fulfillment of the Confucian ideal in education, and were depicted across a range of media, including ceramics and lacquerware. A boy riding a horse (mashang) is a rebus for a wish to have sons soon.

For a painted rendition of this subject, see the Jiajing period (1522-1566) blue and white ‘boys’ jar sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 27 May 2009, lot 1809, in which the boy on the hobby horse is play-acting as an ‘official’ in a mock procession. Two boys riding hobby horses can also be seen in the 14th-century petal-lobed red lacquer tray in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (acc. no. 2015.500.1.31).

更多来自 LJZ珍藏重要中国玉雕

查看全部
查看全部