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AN EXTREMELY RARE MING BLUE AND WHITE 'DRAGON' DISH
AN EXTREMELY RARE MING BLUE AND WHITE 'DRAGON' DISH
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明弘治 青花雲龍紋盤 雙圈六字楷書款

HONGZHI SIX-CHARACTER MARK WITHIN DOUBLE-CIRCLES AND OF THE PERIOD (1488-1505)

細節
盤敞口,弧腹,圈足。通體青花紋飾。盤心雙圈內繪雲龍紋,口沿下一周忍冬紋。外壁飾一對行龍趕珠。底青花雙圈內書「大明弘治年製」楷書款。

弘治青花器傳世品極少,其青花呈色淡雅和諧,是繼承了成化器的燒造工藝。如本盤的龍紋裝飾,唯見R.D. Pilkington伉儷珍藏一件,見1971年倫敦出版A. Joseph著
《Ming Porcelains. Their Origins and Development》,26頁。該書作者提出現存的
同期青花器可能少於二十件。此器龍紋纖幼,神態平和,其他同期的龍紋器多繪荷塘游龍,見北京故宮博物院藏一例。

弘治皇帝主張節儉,曾多次敕令官窰停燒。例如《明史‧本紀第十五孝宗》記:「弘治三年冬十一月甲辰,停工役,罷內官燒造瓷器。」然而減產並不代表質素會下降。弘治官窰所製青花器水平極高,幾與成化器相等。

榮譽呈獻

Nick Wilson
Nick Wilson

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拍品專文

The current dish is a remarkably rare example of the very few extant Hongzhi-marked blue and white porcelain pieces. The Hongzhi Emperor, unlike his father the Chenghua Emperor, was known to be an austere ruler and had issued several edicts during his reign to cease ceramic production at the imperial kiln in Jingdezhen, which accounts for the general scarcity of Hongzhi-marked pieces. Blue and white wares from this period are even rarer, with Adrian Joseph speculating that there are possibly less than 20 extant pieces to date (refer to Adrian Joseph, Ming Porcelains. Their Origins and Development, London, 1971, p. 26). Three other examples bearing this rare design are known- one from the collection of R.D. Pilkington and Mrs Pilkington, illustrated ibid, fig. 41; the second and third both in the British Museum Collection and illustrated by Jessica Harrison-Hall in Ming Ceramics in the British Museum, London, 2001, nos. 7:13-14.

Most other Hongzhi blue and white examples painted with dragon motifs are decorated with dragons in a lotus pond, such as a bowl painted on the interior with a single dragon and the exterior with two dragons, as on the current dish, but all amidst lotus stalks and leaves, from the Beijing Palace Museum and illustrated in Blue and White Porcelain with Underglazed Red (II), The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Hong Kong, 2000, no. 47; and a dish bearing this design illustrated in Toji Taikei, vol. 42, Tokyo, 1975, no. 74; or double dragons contesting a 'flaming pearl' on the interior and further dragons on the exterior, such as the example from the National Palace Museum, Taipei and illustrated in Blue-and-White Ware of the Ming Dynasty, Book IV, Taipei, 1963, pl. 8; or dragons amid lotus scrolls, such as the National Palace Museum example illustrated ibid, pl. 6. All the dragons on the above examples share similar traits as that on the current dish, such as small heads, narrow necks, eyes picked out as two dots within circles and scaly coiling bodies, which are all characteristics of dragons seen on Chenghua and Hongzhi wares. The current dish, with a slightly indented bottom, also conforms to Geng Baochang's observation that Hongzhi wares in general tend to have slightly convex bottoms (refer to Geng Baochang, Mingqing ciqi jianding, Beijing, 1993, p. 111).

The design on the present dish, with a single dragon on the interior and two dragons on the exterior, is based on Chenghua blue and white prototypes, such as the Chenghua-marked dish bearing the same design but with a deeper cavetto and more everted rim, from the National Palace Museum Collection, illustrated in Catalogue of the Special Exhibition of Ch'eng-hua Porcelain Ware, Taipei, 2003, no. 13. In fact Hongzhi imperial wares inherited most of the characteristics of the revered Chenghua wares, such as the highly refined porcelain and the use of local cobalt resulting in the attractive pale blue decoration seen on the current dish, which do not have the 'heaping and piling' effect seen on Yuan and early Ming blue and white wares.

Compare also to two Hongzhi-marked dishes with almost identical design as on the current dish, one decorated in green enamels, the other with the decorations reserved on biscuit, from the Shanghai Museum Collection and illustrated by Lu Minghua in Mingdai guanyao ciqi, Shanghai Bowuguan cangpin yanjiu daxi, 2007, figs. 3-75 and 3-74 respectively.