A RARE SUSANCAI FAMILLE VERTE BISCUIT ROULEAU VASE
A RARE SUSANCAI FAMILLE VERTE BISCUIT ROULEAU VASE
A RARE SUSANCAI FAMILLE VERTE BISCUIT ROULEAU VASE
2 更多
A RARE SUSANCAI FAMILLE VERTE BISCUIT ROULEAU VASE
5 更多
士紳珍藏
清康熙 素三彩山水人物圖棒槌瓶

KANGXI PERIOD (1662-1722)

細節
清康熙 素三彩山水人物圖棒槌瓶
16 ½ in. (42 cm.) high, hardwood stand
來源
Richard Bennett(1849年生)律師珍藏
Edgar Gorer,倫敦,1911年
M. Parish-Watson,紐約
小約翰·戴維森·洛克菲勒(1874-1960)珍藏
約翰·戴維森·洛克菲勒三世(1906-1978)珍藏
Ralph M. Chait 藝廊,紐約,1976年2月2日
紐約私人珍藏;紐約蘇富比,2019年9月11日,拍品編號898
出版
《 Catalogue of the Collection of Old Chinese Porcelains formed by Richard Bennett, Esq.》,倫敦,1911年,圖錄編號316
E. Gorer 及 J. F. Blacker, 《 Chinese Porcelain and Hard Stones》,卷1,倫敦,1911年,圖版編號105
展覽
紐約,Dreicer & Co.,1911年前後
紐約,大都會藝術博物館,「The Grand Gallery」,1974-1975年, 圖錄編號80

榮譽呈獻

Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安) Head of Sale, AVP, Specialist

查閱狀況報告或聯絡我們查詢更多拍品資料

登入
瀏覽狀況報告

拍品專文

The present rouleau vase is a refined example of Kangxi-period porcelain, intricately enameled in susancai—a technique employing a vibrant palette dominated by shades of green, blue, and aubergine. The continuous narrative scene, depicting scholars amidst an idyllic mountainous landscape, is rendered with exceptional refinement. Notably, areas of the sky and water are intentionally left unglazed, revealing the biscuit porcelain body beneath and creating a striking contrast in texture and tonality.

The susancai (素三彩) technique, literally “plain three colors,” traces its origins to the Zhengde reign (1505–1521) of the Ming dynasty, though it reached technical and aesthetic maturity during the Kangxi reign at the imperial kilns in Jingdezhen. The term su refers to the unglazed, high-fired biscuit body, while sancai denotes the tri-color enamel palette applied after the initial firing. This two-stage process not only hardened the body and ensured structural integrity—ideal for transport and handling—but also minimized the risk of cracking during the enameling phase. As a result, susancai surfaces often exhibit a higher level of painterly precision and delicacy than porcelains decorated on glazed grounds.

Vases of this size, decorated on biscuit ground with such painterly sophistication, remain exceedingly rare. The scene—depicting scholarly figures in pavilions nestled among verdant hills, with fishermen traversing tranquil rivers—unfolds across the body in a continuous composition animated by dynamic brushwork and a harmonious color scheme. The use of colors, particularly the modulated use of black ink-like lines to define trees, rocks, and architecture, reveals the artist's fluency in both ceramic and literati painting traditions. For a smaller susancai famille-verte rouleau vase decorated with floral motifs and rockwork, see Hobson, R. L., Rackham, B., and King, W. Chinese Ceramics in Private Collections, London, 1931, pl. 4. A susancai brush pot with a riverside landscape was sold at Sotheby’s London, 12 June 2003, lot 1178.

The distinguished provenance of the present vase further underscores its importance. It was once in the collection of Richard Bennett, a prominent 19th-century English industrialist and pioneering collector of Qing imperial porcelain. Residing at Thornby Hall in Northamptonshire, Bennett assembled one of the most celebrated private collections of Chinese ceramics in Britain. His holdings were dispersed in 1911 through a landmark sale that helped shape major Western collections. Subsequently, the vase entered the storied collections of John D. Rockefeller, Jr. (1874–1960) and John D. Rockefeller III (1906–1978). The Rockefellers, father and son, were among the most discerning American collectors of Chinese art in the twentieth century. Their acquisitions, guided by a deep appreciation for connoisseurship and cultural preservation, formed one of the most comprehensive collections of Chinese porcelain in the Western world, with significant portions now in institutions such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Asia Society in New York.

更多來自 重要中國家具及工藝精品

查看全部
查看全部