Page 125 - Christie's Chinese Works of Art March 24 and 25th, 2022 NYC
P. 125

Dr. Frank E. Whitacre (1897-1971), photographer unknown.  Lillian Whitacre (1907-1986), photographer unknown.
 Frank E. Whitacre 醫生 (1897-1971),攝影師不詳  Lillian Whitacre (1907-1986),攝影師不詳



 In 1938, Dr. Frank E. Whitacre (1897-1971) and his family arrived in Beijing, where he assumed the
 role of Head of the Obstetrics and Gynecology department at Peking Union Medical College, a post
 sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation. His wife Lillian (1907-1986), a graduate of Oberlin College
 and the University of Pittsburgh, developed an interest in Chinese furniture and works of art, and
 began studying and collecting in this area.
                                           (detail)
 Two years later, with the breakout of World War II, Lillian and her two young children boarded the
 Mariposa headed for San Francisco. Dr. Whitacre returned to the US at a later date. Reluctant to part
 with the collection she so carefully created, Lillian persuaded the Rockefeller Foundation to transport
 the pieces to the United States. The furniture, paintings, and works of art collected during the
 Whitacre’s days in Beijing have resided with the family since that time.
               PROPERTY FROM THE WHITACRE FAMILY COLLECTION
               ~1014
               AN UNUSUAL HUANGHUALI ROUND LOW TABLE
               18TH-19TH CENTURY
               The top is set in a circular frame above a narrow waist and cusped, beaded aprons.
               The whole is raised on beaded, shaped legs joined by a circular base stretcher,
               further supported on small tab feet.
               13 in. (33 cm.) high, 33q in. (85.1 cm.) diam.

               $100,000-150,000
               PROVENANCE:
               The Collection of Dr. Frank E. (1897-1971) and Lillian (1907-1986) Whitacre, acquired
               between 1938-1939, and thence by descent within the family.
               This unusual circular table was probably used to support a large vessel or drum. A
               similar circular stand supported on cabriole legs and carved with lion masks and
               scrolling tendrils is illustrated by R.H. Ellsworth in Chinese Furniture: One Hundred
               Examples from the Mimi and Raymond Hung Collection, New York, 1996, pp. 124-
               125, no. 42. The painting Night Revels of Han Xizai by Tang Yin, dated to the Ming
               dynasty, depicts Han Xizai beating on a large drum supported by a tall circular
               table, similar to the present table, illustrated by L. Lin, Catalogue to the Special
               Exhibition of Furniture in Paintings, The National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1996, p.
               64, no. 26. (Fig. 1).

               8)*5"$3&家族珍藏
               清十Ջ 十̏ˠ紀ǎ黃花梨⊀८桌                                           Fig. 1 Tang Yin, Night Revels of Han Xizai, Ming
                                                                         dynasty, hanging scroll. The Collection of
               Ϝ源                                                        National Palace Museum, Taipei.
                                                                         圖ˏ 唐寅畫韓熙載૩宴圖
明代
 ⒤軸
 臺٫४⒤故
               'SBOL & 	         
 及-JMMJBO	         
 8IJUBDSF醫生伉儷珍藏
    宮博ḵ院藏
                        年Ն藏
 後於家族ҷ承
 1014
 122
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