Page 105 - 2020 October 8 HK Fine Classical Paintings
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 PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT COLLECTION
 A PAIR OF HUANGHUALI ROUND-CORNER
 TAPERED CABINETS, YUANJIAOGUI
 MING DYNASTY, 17TH CENTURY
 each constructed with a rectangular projecting top supported on
 splayed corner posts enclosing a pair of panelled doors within
 round moulded frames flanking a central stile, surmounting a
 horizontal band divided into three sections, all above plain apron
 and spandrels, the interior fitted with two shelves
 96 by 51 by h. 179 cm, 37¾ by 20 by h. 70½ in.

 ◉  HK$ 2,000,000-3,000,000
 US$ 258,000-387,000

 明十七世紀   黃花梨有櫃膛圓角櫃成對
 The round-corner cabinet is one of the most elegant and
 recognisable form of classical Chinese furniture. Its subtle
 sloping stiles and wood-hinged construction with the top
 hanging over the stiles, developed from principles and
 aesthetic ideals that were well-established in Chinese wood
 architecture. Like pillars or columns, the side stiles gently
 taper to increase the illusion of height and lightness, while the
 panelled doors and sides, like walls within a room, can be easily
 removed to reveal the space within.
 These round-corner cabinets owe their gracefulness to their
 perfect proportions and clean, unadorned surfaces. The
 powerful swirls and attractive hues of the wood become the
 focal point of the design, as on these pair where the panels set
 into the doors, originally cut from the same log and placed side
 by side, feature mirroring grain patterns. These elegant cabinets
 were a popular type of domestic furniture in the Ming and Qing
 dynasty, and were made of various sizes and with more or less
 pronounced sloping sides. They were kept in scholar’s studios
 and used to store either clothes or writing instruments.
 Cabinets with the panel below the doors divided in three
 sections are unusual although a very similar cabinet from
 the collection of Mrs Cluney Murray, is illustrated in Robert
 Hatfield Ellsworth, Chinese Furniture. Hardwood Examples of
 the Ming and Early Ch’ing Dynasties, New York, 1971, pl. 126.
 圓角櫃乃中式家具典雅之範。上窄下寬,櫃帽噴出,
 作臼窩以納門軸,乃從木造建築演化而來。由下至上
 收窄,尤顯挺拔、輕靈,櫃門及兩側如室內之牆,可
 靈活拆卸,櫃內空間一覽無遺。此式雛型為帶門大
 箱,宋人置於案上。南宋手卷《蠶織圖》中可尋一
 例,黑龍江省博物館藏,見  Sarah  Handler,《Austere
 Luminosity of Chinese Classical Furniture》,柏克萊,2001
 年,圖版15.5。

 圓角櫃比例得當,光素無紋,故得恬雅韻致。現例一
 對採獨板而為櫃門,用料紋理流暢,色澤雋婉,木紋
 相映成趣。明清家宅素愛圓角櫃,所用尺寸不盡相
 同,皆呈上窄下寬狀。常置於文房,或收褒衣博帶,
 或存筆墨紙硯。《金瓶梅》中,西門慶便於書齋擺櫃,
 放官袍及配飾。

 門後設板,將櫃一分為三,乃非尋常式樣,然有一例
 頗似,Cluney  Murray  夫人蓄,錄於安思遠,《中國家
 具:明清硬木家具實例》,紐約,1971年,圖版126。
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