Page 122 - Christie's Chinese Works of Art March 24 and 25th, 2022 NYC
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PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE COLLECTION
          ~1013
                                                              The term Dali stone refers today to all calcitic or dolomitic marbles, but
          A LARGE AND RARE GREEN-MARBLE AND HUANGHUALI
          STANDING SCREEN                                     traditionally referred to white marbles with black veining evoking ink
                                                              paintings. This stone comes from the Diancang mountain range west of
          17TH-18TH CENTURY
                                                              Dali in Yunnan province. The lushi, or green, stone, such as the present
          The variegated green marble panel is set in a rectangular frame with openwork   screen, is considered the most rare, and is technically a form of serpentine. A
          panels carved with scrolling chilong. The reverse is decorated in gilt on a   huanghuali and green marble table screen, dated to the late sixteenth-early
          lacquer ground with birds and floral stems. The whole is raised on a large   seventeenth century, is in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, illustrated by R.
          stand, and the vertical posts are flanked by openwork spandrels and joined by
                                                              D. Jacobsen and N. Grindley, Classical Chinese Furniture in the Minneapolis
          pierced panels and shaped aprons.                   Institute of Arts, Minneapolis, 1999, pp. 208-9, no. 78.
          47Ω in. (120.6 cm.) high, 29Ω in. (74.9 cm.) wide, 14Ω in. (36.8 cm.) deep
                                                              Standing screens were placed inside entrance rooms to dispel draughts and
                                                              to ward off negative cosmic energies. Monumental standing screens could
          $120,000-180,000
                                                              be placed behind the seats of important people to indicate high status. For
          PROVENANCE:                                         one of the largest and finest examples of a floor screen with removable upper
          EverArts Ltd., Hong Kong, 16 December 1996.         panel, see the magnificent Dali marble-inset huanghuali and tielimu screen,
                                                              sold at Christie's, New York, Important Chinese Furniture, Formerly the
                                                              Museum of Classical Chinese Furniture Collection, 19 September 1996, lot
                                                              66, and now in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, illustrated by R.D. Jacobson
                                                              and N. Grindley, op. cit., pp. 152-3, no. 53.

                                                              重要私人珍藏
                                                              十七/十八世紀 黃花梨嵌綠石案屏
                                                              來源:
                                                              恆藝館, 香港, 1996年12月16日

















































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