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 PROPERTY FROM A VIRGINIA PRIVATE COLLECTION  The cabinet, designed for storage, features exceptionally fine
 A GILT AND POLYCHROMED BLACK LACQUER   shaped panels painted with an array of flowers and birds set
 CABINET   into elaborate archaistic openwork. Related examples from
 the Qing Court Collection share characteristics of the present
 QING DYNASTY, QIANLONG PERIOD  cabinet. The use of shaped panels, openwork, and painted
 Height 67½ in., 171.5 cm; Width 42¼ in., 107.3 cm; Depth   lacquer are illustrated by a display cabinet in Furniture of
 16⅝ in., 42.2 cm  the Ming and Qing Dynasties (II), The Complete Collection of
 Treasures of the Palace Museum, Hong Kong, 2002, pl. 215.
 PROVENANCE  Compare another display cabinet with closely related kui
 Collection of Hope (1901-1984) and Lewis R. Andrews (1892-  dragon scrolls, ibid., pl. 220.
 1990), Tulip Hill, Maryland, acquired in Shanghai in the
 1920s-1930s, and thence by descent.  $ 50,000-70,000
 LITERATURE  清乾隆   黑漆加彩描金立櫃
 Hope Andrews, ‘Living with Antiques’, Antiques, October 1969,
 p. 564.  來源
 The present cabinet from the collection of Hope and Lewis   Hope (1901-1984) 及 Lewis R. Andrews (1892-1990) 伉儷
 Andrews has a remarkable history. Lewis Andrews, a   收藏,Tulip Hill,馬里蘭州,1920至1930年代得於上
 decorated British officer, moved to Shanghai in 1919 after his   海,此後家族傳承
 service during World War I. The couple met in Shanghai in the
 1920s, fell in love with Chinese art and immediately started   出版
 collecting until their passion was interrupted by World War   Hope Andrews,〈Living with Antiques〉,
 II. After the war, the couple and their collection moved to   《Antiques》,1969年10月,頁564
 the US. In 1947 they purchased Tulip Hill in Maryland, now
 recognized as one of the most historically and architecturally
 significant pre-revolutionary American mansions.
 Hope Andrews vividly recounted the wartime drama and the
 fate of the cabinet for an article entitled ‘Living with Antiques’
 in Antiques, October 1969. She recalled purchasing the
 cabinet in Shanghai and being informed that it was made
 during the Qianlong reign. During the war, the Andrews’
 house on Hongqiao road was looted but, fortunately, the
 lacquer cabinet was recovered after the war. As Andrews
 noted, it was “recovered from the veranda of what had been
 the Japanese military headquarters. It had been exposed to
 the winds and rains of the typhoon season, but such is the
 durability of eighteenth-century Peking lacquer work that it
 suffered relatively little damage”. At Tulip Hill, the cabinet was
 prominently placed in the living room among the couple’s
 other fine furnishings and artworks.






















 The present lot illustrated in Hope Andrews, ‘Living with
 Antiques’, Antiques, October 1969, p. 564.
 本拍品錄於 Hope Andrews,<Living with Antiques>,《Antiques》,
 1969年10月,頁564
 134  SOTHEBY’S  COMPLETE CATALOGUING AVAILABLE AT SOTHEBYS.COM/N11074                                      135
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