A FOLIATE 'DRAGON' MEDALLION DAYBED COVER
A FOLIATE 'DRAGON' MEDALLION DAYBED COVER
A FOLIATE 'DRAGON' MEDALLION DAYBED COVER
1 更多
A FOLIATE 'DRAGON' MEDALLION DAYBED COVER
4 更多
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF HANS KÖNIG
A FOLIATE 'DRAGON' MEDALLION DAYBED COVER

NINGXIA, NORTH CHINA, 17TH CENTURY

细节
A FOLIATE 'DRAGON' MEDALLION DAYBED COVER
NINGXIA, NORTH CHINA, 17TH CENTURY
Even overall wear, localised restoration, selvages worn or lacking, minor loss at each end
6ft. x 4ft.4in. (185cm. x 136cm.)
来源
Edelmann Galleries, New York, June 1980, from whom purchased
Thence by descent
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The reign of the Kangxi Emperor (1662-1722) was a period of great achievement for all the arts, and carpets woven during this period are celebrated for their harmony and proportion both in coloration and size. Woven for both the Imperial court and nobility, Qing dynasty rugs and carpets were often made for a specific place or function. Based on its proportions, the present carpet was most likely made as a daybed cover that would have been typically reserved for an important guest.

荣誉呈献

Phoebe Jowett Smith
Phoebe Jowett Smith Sale Coordinator & Cataloguer

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拍品专文

This daybed cover is very similar in appearance to lot 141 in the present sale but excludes the additional paired bats within the field. The present rug notably includes the Chinese shòu (壽) symbol at its very center and between each of the inverted, paired foliate leaf dragons above and below the central medallion. This geometric, maze-like symbol is a Chinese character representing longevity and is commonly found on textiles, furniture, ceramics and jewelry, and would traditionally have been intended to have a direct influence on the life of its owner. The ideograph may appear alone or be surrounded by flowers, bats, or other good luck symbols, but will always hold a central position. A closely related example with the same fret corner brackets enclosing the central roundel, but without the shou symbol is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, (A. Hackmack, Chinese Carpets and Rugs, Tientsin-Peking, 1923, pl. XX, fig.49).

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