Page 120 - Christie's Chinese Works of Art March 24 and 25th, 2022 NYC
P. 120

THE PROPERTY OF A NEW YORK COLLECTOR
          ~1012
                                                              Large single-panel huanghuali tables, such as the present example, are   紐☼私́珍藏
          A RARE HUANGHUALI RECESSED-LEG TABLE
          17TH-18TH CENTURY                                   extremely rare. The panel is textured and enlivened by the active and   十ˑ 十Ջˠ紀ǎ黃花梨平頭案
                                                              beautifully-figured grain which nicely compliments the spare, economic
          The single-panel top is set in a rectangular frame above plain, beaded apron   lines typical of this form. Tables of this large size would also be ideal for   Ϝ源
          and ruyi-form spandrels. The whole is raised on gently splayed, round-section   the appreciation of a painting. A large painting table of slightly smaller
          legs joined by pairs of stretchers.                 proportions (77 3/8 in. wide) with openwork panels between pairs of   7BMMJO (BMMFSJFT
 康涅Ṽ格州威ḓ頓
     年
          31æ in. (80.6 cm.) high, 82º in. (208.9 cm.) wide, 23¿ in. (58.7 cm.) deep  stretchers is illustrated by Robert Ellsworth in Chinese Furniture: Hardwood
                                                              Examples of the Ming and Ch’ing Dynasties, New York, 1970, p. 155, pl. 51,
          $150,000-250,000                                    51a and 51b. Another similarly proportioned recessed-leg table, now in
                                                              the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, was sold in Christie’s
          PROVENANCE:                                         New York, Important Chinese Furniture, Formerly the Museum of Classical
          Vallin Galleries, Wilton, Connecticut, 1989.        Chinese Furniture Collection, 19 September 1996, lot 16.
   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125