Page 15 - Christie's Fine Jade the LZJ Collection NYC September 21, 2023
P. 15

804        805

 A WHITE JADE FIGURE OF A RECUMBENT RAM  宋 白玉臥羊  AN UNUSUAL INSCRIBED PALE YELLOWISH-GREEN JADE   南宋 明初 十̾至十ω世㈵ 
 SONG DYNASTY (AD 960-1279)  CARVING OF A RAM EMERGING FROM A PEBBLE           黃青玉雕「द石成羊」把Ы
 Ϝ源
 The ram is shown with the legs tucked underneath the body and the two long horns swept   安思遠(         )
 紐☼  SOUTHERN SONG-EARLY MING DYNASTY, 13TH-15TH CENTURY  Ϝ源
 "OUIPOZ $BSUFS
 і敦
     年 月  日                                                安思遠(         )
 紐☼
 backwards, with the back of the beard pierced with a single hole. The stone is of an even    The carving is formed as a ram with backswept horns springing forth from a heart-shaped
 -+;珍藏
 美४                                                                     "OUIPOZ $BSUFS
 і敦
     年 月  日
 white tone with some opaque mottling.  pebble. The side of the pebble is inscribed with two characters in seal script reading chi shi.  -+;珍藏
 美४
 ֨ḛ
 1¬ in. (4.1 cm.) long  1æ in. (4.5 cm.) long
 "  $BSUFS
 Ǘ5IF -+; $PMMFDUJPO PG                                             ֨ḛ
 $15,000-25,000  $IJOFTF +BEFTǘ
 і敦
     年
 頁     
   $15,000-25,000           "  $BSUFS
 Ǘ5IF -+; $PMMFDUJPO PG
 編號                                                                            $IJOFTF +BEFTǘ
 і敦
     年
 頁
                                                                               編號
 PROVENANCE:
            PROVENANCE:
 Robert H. Ellsworth (1929-2014), New York.  Robert H. Ellsworth (1929-2014), New York.
 Anthony Carter, London, 29 March 2004.  Anthony Carter, London, 29 March 2004.
 The LJZ Collection, United States.  The LJZ Collection, United States.
 LITERATURE:
            LITERATURE:
 A. Carter, The LJZ Collection of Chinese Jades, London, 2022, pp. 36-37, no. 13.  A. Carter, The LJZ Collection of Chinese Jades, London, 2022, pp. 38-39, no. 14.

            The two-character inscription on the underside of the present carving, chi shi, is shortened
            from the idiom chi shi cheng yang, which literally means to “scold” a rock to transfigure into
            a ram. Originally derived from an essay written by the Tang-dynasty scholar-official Gu
            Yun, the phrase refers to a mystical or miraculous transformation.    (inscription)

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