Page 183 - Sotheby's NYC September 21 2022 Important Chinese Art
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               A PAIR OF SPECTACLES SET WITH CRYSTAL     geometry, physics, and especially optics, visited these shops                          Surveying the existing spectacles in the Palace Museum,   清十八 / 十九世紀   水晶眼鏡
               LENSES                                    in Hangzhou early in his career and sought to bring this                               Beijing, Mao discusses the use of these corrective spectacles   印文:
               QING DYNASTY, 18TH / 19TH CENTURY         knowledge back to his birthplace. Through much trial and                               by the Qing emperors, citing that the Qing Court Collection
                                                         error, Sun was able to greatly advance and expand the use                              contained both spectacles gifted by Western missionaries   真正水晶
               yellow brocade case, with labels reading zhenzheng shuijing   of corrective lenses. Not only was he able to produce around       to the emperors as well as ones made domestically,   三山老店
               (real crystal), san shan lao dian (the old shop of san shan),   24 different lenses to cater to a wider range of eyesight        including ones from well-known commercial workshops.   褚堯天製
               Chu Yaotian zhi (Made by Chu Yaotian), ink label in French   problems by switching the use of glass lenses to crystal ones,      The Yongzheng, Qianlong and Xuantong Emperors all had a
               reading à M. Brochart, hommage de respectueuse gratitude   he also invented spectacles that could be worn on the nose,           personal collection of spectacles. In particular, the Yongzheng   來源
               12 mai 1902 (to Monsieur Brochart, as a tribute of respectful   greatly increasing the daily convenience of these lenses.        Emperor was recorded to be especially fond of them: Qing   Brochart 先生獲贈於1902年5月12日
               gratitude 12th May 1902) (3)              Sun’s invention was immediately met with great success and                             records documented that the Emperor once had spectacles
               Width when extended 6 in., 15.2 cm        the use of eyeglasses quickly popularized and spread to the                            placed everywhere around him, including his bedroom and
                                                         rest of the empire. Suzhou became known as the center of                               at Yuanmingyuan, so that he could use them whenever he
               PROVENANCE                                production for these crystal lenses.                                                   needed to. Compare a closely related pair, with huangtong
               Gifted to Mr. Brochart, 12th May 1902.    During the reign of the Qianlong Emperor, the workshop                                 ruyi-shaped mounts, in the Palace Museum, Beijing,
               Imported into China during the Yuan dynasty, corrective   of Chu Sanshan appeared and was known as the best                      illustrated in ibid., p. 33.
               lenses were solely reserved for the rich and powerful up   amongst the many in the city (see Mao Xianming, ‘Gugong               The yellow embroidered spectacle case may further indicate
               until the Ming period due to the high cost and rarity of these   zhenchang de yanjing [Spectacles in the collection of the       an imperial association. See a related embroidered eyeglass
               imported goods. A burden to use, these lenses were often   Palace Museum]’, Zijincheng, 2002, pp 34-36). Believed to             pouch, in the National Palace Museum, Taipei (accession no.
               singular handheld instruments, more closely resembling   be a student of Sun, Chu further advanced the technology                贈雜000047N000000000). Compare several embroidered
               magnifiers than eyeglasses. During the later years of the   developed by his teacher. The labels on the present lot,             spectacle cases with a similar silk cord, one, attributed to
               Ming dynasty, the knowledge to produce such lenses was   indicate that these came from ‘the old shop of Sanshan’ and             the 18th to 19th century, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
               slowly acquired by the craftsmen of Hangzhou, and the   were ‘made by Chu Yaotian’, which points to this well-known              New York (accession no. 30.75.687), three, attributed to a
               city became an emerging site for China’s earliest domestic   workshop, with Chu Yaotian possibly a descendant of the             later date, in the Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis
               production of corrective lenses. Sun Yunqiu (1628-1662), a   famous Chu Sanshan.                                                 (accession nos 45.15.3, 31.50.172a and 30.23.175), and
               scholar and inventor from Suzhou who was well versed in                                                                          illustrated in Robert D. Jacobsen, Imperial Silks: Ch’ing
                                                                                                                                                Dynasty Textiles in The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, vol. II,
                                                                                                                                                Minneapolis, 2000, pls 356, 359 and 360.
                                                                                                                                                ⊖  $ 50,000-70,000










































               180     SOTHEBY’S        COMPLETE CATALOGUING AVAILABLE AT SOTHEBYS.COM/N11074                                                                                                                                           181
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