Page 255 - Sotheby's Important Chinese Art, Sept. 21-22, 2-21, NYC
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 A FINELY CARVED AND MOLDED ‘DING’ EWER   Ding County Museum, Hebei province, illustrated in Ding
 NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY  Yao Ceramics from the Beixuan Shuzhai Collection, Hong
 Kong, 2013, fig. 27. And another ewer with angled sides,
 the hexalobed spherical body surmounted by a tall   overlapping lotus petals, and very similar dragon spout,
 cylindrical, slightly waisted neck, one side applied with   standing slightly taller (18.7 cm), is in the Musée Guimet,
 an openwork triple-strap loop handle with raised bosses   Paris, illustrated in Mino Yutaka, Hakuji [White Porcelain],
 terminating in a delicately molded beast-mask at the base,   vol. 5. Tokyo, 1998, pl. 40.
 opposite a finely articulated dragon head with a curving
 elongated spout extending from its open mouth, a column of   The petal design on the base of this vessel is also present
 bosses on the underside of the spout, the body deftly carved   on a white-glazed Xing ware bowl from the Tang dynasty,
 with two lush peony blossoms on a meandering leafy scroll   formerly in the Percival David Foundation Collection, and
 now in the British Museum, London (museum no. PDF.182).
 in relief, above petal lappets encircling the base, all under a
 translucent cool white glaze  Due to the similarity between Xing and Ding wares, this
 Height 7¾ in., 17.8 cm  bowl was previously believed to be a Ding ware of the Song
 dynasty, and only in recent years has it been identified a
 PROVENANCE  product of the earlier period and kiln site based its glaze
 and other properties. For another Ding ware carved with
 Offered at Sotheby’s Hong Kong, 1st November 1994, lot 5.
 this motif, see a box with a similar petal design excavated in
 The present ewer is an unusually fine and elaborate example   Quyang County, Baoding City, Hebei Province and exhibited
 from a small group of early white wares with carved designs.   and illustrated in Ding Ware, The World of White Elegance,
 Its motifs are individually modeled and combine mythical and   Recent Archaeological Findings, Osaka, 2013, p. 121, pl. 14.
 natural forms, with the latter informed by direct observation
 of native flora, contributing to the overall elegance of the   $ 200,000-300,000
 design. An ewer of very similar proportions but with a much
 simpler handle (perhaps replaced) and slightly simpler   北宋   定窰白釉牡丹紋執壺
 design of the flowers is illustrated in Oscar Rücker-Embden,
 Chinesische Frühkeramik, Leipzig, 1922, col. pl. 24, with a line   來源:
 drawing of the carving, pl. 25, from the author’s collection
 and later in the Staatliche Porzellansammlung, Dresden.  上拍於香港蘇富比1994年11月1日,編號5
 Compare also an ewer with a similar dragon-head spout
 but with a much wider neck and simpler handle in the





































 252  SOTHEBY’S  COMPLETE CATALOGUING AVAILABLE AT SOTHEBYS.COM/N10748  CHINESE CERAMICS: A PRIVATE COLLECTION  253
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