Page 142 - Bonhams Chinese Paintings and Works of Art Sept 15, 2015
P. 142

8166

8166
ATTRIBUTED TO TINGQUA (MID-19TH CENTURY)
Flowers and Insects
A set of eight paintings, gouache on paper, each composition a delicately rendered study of
botanical and entomological specimens.
6 1/2 x 8 1/4in (16.5 x 20.9cm) dimensions of the largest
$6,000 - 9,000

傳庭呱 花蟲冊頁 水彩紙本 冊頁八開

Provenance
Purchased at Sotheby’s Parke-Bernet, Hong Kong, 1977

Botanical and entomological studies created in China for the export market became popular
after 1756, when an imperial decree was lifted, allowing Europeans and Americans to trade
with China through the port of Guangdong. Whereas tea, silk and porcelain were among the
most sought after commodities, native Chinese plants such as peonies, lilies, hydrangea, and
lilacs were among the numerous species that were introduced to European and American
gardens in the late 18th and 19th centuries. For a careful study of Qing botanical paintings
for the West see Karina H. Corrigan “Chinese Botanical Paintings for the Export Market”, The
Magazine Antiques, June 2004.

140 | BONHAMS
   137   138   139   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   147