A HUANGHUALI SQUARE-CORNER TRAVELING BOOKCASE, TUSHUXINGGUI
A HUANGHUALI SQUARE-CORNER TRAVELING BOOKCASE, TUSHUXINGGUI
A HUANGHUALI SQUARE-CORNER TRAVELING BOOKCASE, TUSHUXINGGUI
2 更多
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF MR. AND MRS. JONATHAN AUERBACH
十七/十八世紀 黃花梨圖書行櫃

17TH-18TH CENTURY

細節
十七/十八世紀 黃花梨圖書行櫃
32 in. (81.3 cm.) high, 25 in. (63.5 cm.) wide, 14 in. (35.6 cm.) deep
來源
Grace Wu Bruce, Hong Kong.

榮譽呈獻

Margaret Gristina (葛曼琪)
Margaret Gristina (葛曼琪) Senior Specialist, VP

拍品專文

Cabinets of this type were likely to have been filled with books, scrolls, or paintings. To facilitate transport and to protect the traveling case from moisture or insects, the cabinet was raised on a fitted base and fitted with an upright frame and would have been carried at either end of a long carrying pole. Consequently, the stress placed on the frame required a particularly strong construction, reinforced with inlaid hardware. For a discussion of metal fittings on bookcases, see an article by Curtis Evarts, "Uniting Elegance and Utility: Metal Mounts on Chinese Furniture", JCCFS, Summer 1994, pp. 27-47.

A smaller huanghuali medicine cabinet (58 cm.), in the collection of Dr. R. J. C. Hoeppli, is illustrated by G. Ecke, Domestic Chinese Furniture, Rutland and Tokyo, 1962, p. 135, fig. 107, where Ecke illustrates the chest with the doors open revealing numerous drawers. See, also, a similar huamu traveling bookcase of larger proportion and inset with nanmu-burl doors sold at Christie’s New York, 17 September 2015, lot 911.

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