A VERY RARE PARE OF BLACK LACQUERED BAMBOO ARMCHAIRS
A VERY RARE PARE OF BLACK LACQUERED BAMBOO ARMCHAIRS
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PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF RONALD W. LONGSDORF
A VERY RARE PAIR OF BLACK LACQUERED BAMBOO ARMCHAIRS

QING DYNASTY, 18TH-19TH CENTURY

细节
A VERY RARE PAIR OF BLACK LACQUERED BAMBOO ARMCHAIRS
QING DYNASTY, 18TH-19TH CENTURY
Each with a straight splat divided into three sections, the uppermost pierced with a shaped opening, the central section with traces of poetic inscriptions and the bottom section with a circular opening, all below a top rail bent at two corners to form the rear posts which continue to the rear legs. The straight arms are supported on spindle-like braces and front posts which continue through the seat to form the front legs. The legs are encircled by double layered stretchers at the sides and a foot rest at the front.
38 5/8 in. (98.2 cm.) high, 20 1/4 in. (51.5 cm.) wide, 17 7/8 in. (45.5 cm.) deep (2)
来源
Purchased from Mallett, London, circa 1985
出版
Ronald W. Longsdorf, ‘Chinese Bamboo Furniture: Its History and Influence on Hardwood Furniture Design - January 1994’, Chinese Furniture: Selected Articles from Orientations 1984-2003, Hong Kong, 2004, p.189, fig.11

荣誉呈献

Priscilla Kong
Priscilla Kong

拍品专文

The present pair of armchairs feature design elements which were later incorporated into hardwood furniture design. The structure where the top rail and armrests continue to become the rear posts and the front posts respectively, and share the characteristics of a ‘southern official’s armchair’, nanguanmaoyi. It has been suggested by Sarah Handler, ‘that perhaps the continuous arms evolved from bent bamboo construction’ (see ‘A Yokeback Chair for Sitting Tall’, Journal of the Classical Furniture Society, Spring 1993, pp. 4-23), as illustrated by a drawing of a bamboo chair in the Ming dynasty woodblock prints sancai tuhui (fig. 1).

The present pair of armchairs appears to have originated as a set of four, or possibly more; one of the set from C. T. Loo is illustrated in M. Beurdeley, Chinese Furniture, New York, 1979, p.49, pl.66 and is dated to the Qianlong period. No other extant examples of bamboo chair in comparable design and date is known, as they are much more fragile than their hard wood counterparts. 

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