Page 100 - 2020 October 8 HK Fine Classical Paintings
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          PROPERTY FROM THE KAISENDO MUSEUM          元     剔紅花鳥紋盤
          A SUPERBLY CARVED CINNABAR LACQUER              《楊茂造》針刻款
          ‘MAGPIE’ TRAY
          SIGNED YANG MAO, YUAN DYNASTY
          of circular form, the interior carved through layers of red
          lacquer with a pair of confronting magpies with outstretched
          wings and long tail plumage flying amidst peony blossoms
          wreathed in profuse foliage, the underside carved with
          ruyi scrolls, the base lacquered black and incised with the
          inscription Yang Mao zao (‘Made by Yang Mao’), Japanese
          wood box
          31.8 cm, 12½ in.
          HK$ 600,000-800,000
          US$ 77,500-104,000

          The finely carved design of two magpies amidst peonies on
          this exquisite dish represents a popular design motif of the
          Yuan dynasty. Another example in the Tokugawa Art Museum,
          Nagoya, signed by the other famous Yuan dynasty lacquer
          carver Zhang Cheng, was included in the exhibition Carved
          Lacquer, Tokyo, 1984, cat. no. 52. Compare also a lacquer tray
          signed Yang Mao, similarly composed with long-tailed birds
          depicted flying amidst peony blossoms, sold at Christie’s Hong
          Kong, 30th May 2005, lot 1335. Another circular lacquer dish
          size from Nishihonganji West Temple, Kyoto, also signed Yang
          Mao, was sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 29th November 2005,
          lot 1529. It is of slightly smaller size than the current dish,
          carved with a design of lotus flowers in a lotus pond.
          The carved design on the underside, known as tixi or the
          Japanese term, guri (curves and circles), was a pattern
          established towards the end of the Song dynasty. The scrolling
          foliage design so successfully rendered here, referred to
          as juancao (scrolling grass) or xiangcao (fragrant grass),
          first appeared on Song dynasty lacquerwares and enjoyed
          considerable popularity well into the Yuan dynasty.
          On the base, the present box bears the needle-engraved
          signature Yang Mao zao (‘made by Yang Mao’). Yang Mao is
          known from Gegu yaolun [The essential criteria of antiquities]
          by Cao Zhao of 1388, where he and Zhang Cheng, both of
          Xitang in Jiaxing district, Zhejiang province, southwest of
          modern Shanghai, are mentioned as carvers of red lacquer
          who became famous at end of the Yuan dynasty (Xinzeng
          gegu yaolun [New expanded edition of the essential criteria of
          antiquities], vol. 8, p. 2).
















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