Page 165 - Sotheby's NYC September 21 2022 Important Chinese Art
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               AN ARCHAISTIC SILVER-INLAID BRONZE        For an example attributed to the Yuan dynasty housed in
               FIGURE OF A TAPIR                         the National Palace Museum, Taipei, see one included in
               MING DYNASTY                              the exhibition Through the Prism of the Past. Antiquarian
                                                         Trends in Chinese Art of the 16th to 18th Century, National
               Length 9¼ in., 23.5 cm                    Palace Museum, Taipei, 2008, cat. no. III-55. Compare also
                                                         one attributed to the Song-Ming dynasty and recently sold in
               PROVENANCE                                these rooms, 21st September 2021, lot 223. Finally, consider
               Swiss Private Collection.                 three examples attributed to the Yuan / Ming periods, all sold
                                                         at auction: one in our Paris rooms, 9th June 2010, lot 37, and
               The shape and inlaid decoration of this vessel are based on   the other two sold at Christie’s New York, 26th September
               ancient prototypes from the Warring States period, 5th-3rd   2020, lot 1538 and 22nd March 2007, lot 162.
               century B.C., such as one in the National Palace Museum,
               Taipei, illustrated in Special Exhibition of Shang and Chou   The dating of this lot is consistent with the results of a
               Dynasty Bronze Wine vessels, National Palace Museum,   thermoluminescence test, Oxford Authentication Ltd., sample
               Taipei, 1989, cat. no. 66.                no.C119k12.
               Archaistic vessels of this form have typically been broadly   ⊖  $ 100,000-120,000
               attributed to the Song to Ming dynasties. Compare a similar
               vessel with spiral relief designs illustrated in Philip K. Hu,
               Later Chinese Bronzes. The Saint Louis Museum and Robert E.   明    銅錯銀犧尊
               Kresko Collections, Saint Louis, 2008, pl. 6, where the author
               notes that the presence of relief casting suggests a Ming   來源
               dynasty manufacture. Compare two others attributed to the
               Ming dynasty, 16th or 17th century: the first was included in   瑞士私人收藏
               the exhibition Bronzes de la Chine impériale des Song aux   本拍品經牛津熱釋光檢測編號C119k12,結果與其斷
               Qing, Musée Cernuschi, Paris, 2013, cat. no. 42, the other
               was sold in these rooms, 15th March 2017, lot 565. Another   代相符
               related example with fewer relief designs, also attributed to
               the Ming dynasty, is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New
               York (accession no. 29.110.9).











































               162     SOTHEBY’S        COMPLETE CATALOGUING AVAILABLE AT SOTHEBYS.COM/N11074                                                                                                                                           163
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