Page 84 - Lieber Collection Chinese Art
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           A RARE BLUE AND WHITE ‘LUDUAN’ CENSER AND A COVER, MING DYNASTY, WANLI PERIOD,
           stoutly potted, the mythical creature modeled four-square, the body painted in inky tones of cobalt blue with a foliate meander
           interspersed with trailing flame wisps, the neck applied with a collar suspending a bell and tassels, a curled upswept tail at the rear, the
           cover in the form of the raised head with bulging eyes, mouth agape baring teeth, spiraling and straight tufts of hair, bearing a fierce
           demeanor, all supported on four scaly legs terminating in clawed feet (2)

           ᬻ㥙᯳   䱿㟞⩗〜ᒏ⚼✽䙺㧸
           Height 13 in., 33 cm
           $ 60,000-80,000

                    PROVENANCE                           ҳ⎽
                    Ralph M. Chait Galleries, New York.  Ralph M  Chait Galleries喑㈽㈱
                  ೏

                    This robustly potted and boldly decorated vessel belongs to a select group of wares modeled in the form
                    of luduan that were produced during the Wanli period (r. 1573-1620). Both the playfulness and majesty of
                    luduan, a legendary animal in Chinese mythology, are meticulously captured through the animated expression
                    and bulging eyes. Luduan, an auspicious creature with the ability to traverse vast distances in a day and to
                    master all languages, was said to appear only in areas where a virtuous leader was present. Censers modeled
                    in the form of a luduan are known to have been produced in bronze as early as the Han dynasty (206 BC- 220
                    AD), such as one from the Bondy Collection, included in the Berlin Exhibition of Chinese Art, Berlin, 1929,
                    cat. no. 45. These bronze prototypes provided inspiration for numerous ceramic and porcelain interpretations,
                    including the present.
                    Porcelain featuring such intricate modeling is prone to distortion during the firing process, and as a result
                    few censers of this large size and form are known; a closely related example also decorated with a leafy scroll
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                    over the body, was sold in our London rooms, 10  May 1994, lot 2; and another painted with a floral scroll
                    was included in the exhibition Chinesisches Porzellan der Mingdynastie. 14. Bis 17 Jahrhundert, Zwinger
                    Museum, Dresden, 1987, cat. no 3767. These larger censers are particularly notable for their extensive detailed
                    designs that emphasize the auspiciousness and other-worldliness of the creature.
                    Smaller censers of this type are also known, but are notably simpler in form and design; see one sold in our
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                    London rooms, 9  December 1986, lot 203, and another, dated to the 17  century, sold at Christie’s London,
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                    26  April 2016, lot 81. Compare also a censer painted in wucai enamels, sold at Christie’s South Kensington,
                    4  November 2014, lot 291, and a Ming Longquan celadon example, sold in our London rooms 19  June 1984,
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                    lot 246.



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