A MAGNIFICENT AND VERY RARE PAIR OF LARGE IMPERIAL ZITAN LANTERN STANDS AND ZITAN AND SOFTWOOD LANTERNS, TIAO GAN DENG JIA
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA COLLECTION
清中期 御製紫檀雕鳳紋挑杆燈架一對

18TH CENTURY

細節
紫檀木製。方形須彌式底座,面下有束腰,上下飾蓮瓣紋。牙條下垂窪膛肚,帶龜角。上安瓶式柱,立柱四面有站牙抵夾,瓶中有孔,圓燈杆插過瓶口,直貫底座。燈杆頂部為圓雕鳳頭,下有掛環,垂掛百子圖玻璃宮燈,燈上方安紫檀方形毗盧帽,下垂流蘇。

本對燈架用木講究,精工巧雕,紋飾富麗,應為清中期的宮廷傢具,後朝的製作水平很難達到。北京故宮珍藏一件形制、紋飾相若的清代中期燈架(圖一),唯該例的雕工不及本對精細。北京故宮實景陳設可見各式宮燈,包括長春宮內紫檀寶座兩旁的一對掛燈,見1984年紐約出版《紫禁城宮殿》,104頁;座旁設一對座地孔雀羽宮扇,亦裝近似的竿座,估計本對燈架原來亦為宮廷寶座旁的擺設。

此品源自著名荷李活演員盧戈西(Bela Lugosi, 1882-1956年)珍藏,1950年代他逝世前
轉贈予摯友,即現任藏家的祖母,後一直於家族流傳。盧戈西主演1931年電影《吸血殭屍》而享譽國際影壇。
來源
Bela Lugosi (1882-1956) Collection.

榮譽呈獻

Christopher Engle
Christopher Engle

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拍品專文

This magnificent pair of zitan lantern stands and zitan and softwood lanterns was once in the collection of the legendary actor Bela Lugosi (1882-1956), famous for his role in the 1931 movie Dracula. In gratitude for a long friendship and years of assistance, the present pair of lanterns was gifted to the grandmother of the present owner in the 1950s, shortly prior to Lugosi's death, and have remained in the family home ever since.

These types of imperial lantern stands and lanterns would certainly have been amongst the lavish Palace furnishings of the early-mid 18th century. They are superb examples, owing to their size, style and quality of carving, and substantial use of precious zitan. This may also suggest a date of Yongzheng or early Qianlong period, as such refinement is not often seen on later examples. The present pair of lantern stands is very similar to another zitan lantern stand preserved in the Palace Museum, illustrated in Ming Qing Gong Ting Jia Ju Da Guan, Beijing, 2006, pp. 392-93, no. 413, where it is dated to the middle Qing period. (Fig. 1). Both the present pair and the illustrated example feature phoenix-form terminals, cylindrical centre sections, and vase-shaped bases on square plinths. However, the Palace lantern stand, while supporting a slightly more elaborate lantern, is less elaborate in its carved ornamentation.

Lantern stands and lanterns of this kind were used to illuminate one of the myriad rooms in the Palace. See, for example, the pair of closely related lanterns suspended above and flanking a zitan throne chair in the Chang Chun Gong (Hall of Eternal Spring) in the Forbidden City, illustrated in Palaces of the Forbidden City, New York, 1984, p. 104. In the same image, also flanking the above mentioned throne, one can see a pair of feather ornaments on similartall zitan pole supports and bases, and it is quite possible that the present pair of lantern stands and lanterns were intended to be used in similar fashion, flanking a large throne chair in one of the Palace chambers.

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