Page 50 - SOtheby's Hong Kong Fine Chinese Art May 2018
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           PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE JAPANESE COLLECTION  宋   青白釉葵口大盤
           A RARE AND EXCEPTIONALLY LARGE            來源:
           QINGBAI LOBED BASIN
                                                     壺中居,東京(盒)
           SONG DYNASTY
                                                     展覽:
           beautifully potted with deep rounded sides rising from a flat   《東洋陶磁展》,東京國立博物館,東京,1970年,編
           base to a flared six-lobed rim, covered overall in a translucent
                                                     號44
           glaze, save for the flat base left unglazed revealing a smooth
           white body slight browned in the firing   此盤器形魁碩典雅。青白釉器有厚胎、繁飾者,亦有薄
           31 cm, 12¼ in.
                                                     胎、纖巧者,有如此件。其六瓣葵口形乃沿襲唐末定瓷,
           PROVENANCE                                可見宋代諸窰南北呼應。
           Kochukyo, Tokyo (box).
                                                     比較一北京故宮博物院藏之相類青白釉盤,尺寸較小,釉
           EXHIBITED                                 色粉青,錄於《故宮博物院藏文物珍品全集:宋瓷(下)
           Exhibition of Far Eastern Ceramics, Tokyo National Museum,   》,香港,1996年,圖版162。另比較一定窰盤,同形較
           Tokyo, 1970, cat. no. 44.
                                                     小,傳為宋品,為 Brodie Lodge 伉儷舊藏,曾展於東方
           HK$ 150,000-200,000                       陶瓷學會,《Song Dynasty Wares: Ting, Ying Ch’ing
           US$ 19,200-25,500                         and Tz’u Chou》,倫敦,1949年,編號143,後售於倫
                                                     敦蘇富比1988年6月7日,編號127。
           The present basin is notable for its exceptionally large size
           and graceful form. Qingbai wares ranged from robustly potted
           and elaborately decorated types to a more delicate and thinly
           potted form, such as the present example. The six-lobed flower
           shape of this piece appears to derive from Ding porcelain
           of the late Tang dynasty, reflecting the degree of dialogue
           between northern and southern ceramists active in the Song
           dynasty.
           Compare a qingbai dish of this form, but of smaller size and
           covered in a pale-blue glaze, in the Palace Museum, Beijing,
           illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the
           Palace Museum. Porcelain of the Song Dynasty (II), Hong
           Kong, 1996, pl. 162. See also a smaller Ding dish of this form,
           attributed to the Song dynasty, from the collection of Mr.
           and Mrs. F. Brodie Lodge, included in the Oriental Ceramic
           Society Exhibition Sung Dynasty Wares, Ting, ying,ch’ing and
           Tz’u Chou, London, 1949, cat. no 143, and sold in our London
           rooms, 7th June 1988, lot 127.





















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