Page 219 - Christie's Chinese Works of Art March 24 and 25th, 2022 NYC
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ⱷ1081
          A LONGQUAN CELADON 'ARROW' VASE
          SOUTHERN SONG DYNASTY (1127-1279)
          The pear-shaped body rises to a tall, slender neck flanked by a
          pair of tubular handles, and is incised with a series of bands. The
          vase is covered overall with an even glaze of soft sea-green color.
          6p in. (16 cm.) high, Japanese wood box

          $12,000-18,000
          The form of this vase is based on ‘arrow vases’, or touhu, the
          primary accessory of a drinking game which involved throwing
          all of one's arrows into the mouth of the vessel. The loser was
          assessed a penalty drink for every errant throw.
          Too small to actually be used in the drinking game, the present
          vase was probably intended to hold flowers. A pair of Longquan
          arrow vases of the same height but with wider necks, was
          recovered from the tomb of the Yuan calligrapher Xian Yushu
 P

 P
 RO
 S
 A
 R
 U
 IO
 E
 E
 VARIOUS PROPERTIES S
 V
 R
 T
 I
          (1251-1302). See Zhang Yulan, "Hangzhoushi faxian Yuandai
 1
 ⱷ1080    Xian Yushu mu," Wenwu, 1990:9, p. 24, figs. 11-12. Another
 080
 ⱷ
          similar vase was included in the exhibition, The Scholar as
 A LONGQUAN CELADON CONICAL BOWL   Collector: Chinese Art at Yale, Yale University Art Gallery and
 SOUTHERN SONG DYNASTY (1127-1279)
          China Institute in America, New York, 2004, p. 18, fig. 8.
 The bowl has conical sides flaring widely from the small, delicate
 foot, and is covered inside and out with an unctuous glaze of soft
 sea-green tone, stopping at the foot ring.  南宋ǎ龍泉青釉投ૐ
 5º in. (13.2 cm.) diam., Japanese wood box
 $8,000-12,000
 PROVENANCE:
 Tea ceremony practitioner, Kansai, active in the 1970s, by repute.
 The rather delicate conical form of this bowl, standing on a
 small foot, is shown to good advantage by the even, blue-green
 glaze. Conical bowls were used for the drinking of tea, and the
 Longquan kilns produced such bowls for both the domestic
 and export market. Three similar Longquan conical bowls were
 discovered in 1991 in Suining, Sichuan province, amongst a cache
 of ceramics dating from the late Southern Song period. See
 Newly Discovered Southern Song Ceramics, A Thirteenth-Century
 "Time Capsule", Tokyo, 1998, pp. 40-1, nos. 36-8. A very similar
 bowl, recovered from the Sinan wreck off the coast of Korea, was
 included in the Special Exhibition of Cultural Relics Found off the
 Sinan Coast, National Museum of Korea, Seoul, 1977, pl. 19. A
 crackle-glazed example was excavated from the Song dynasty
 kiln at Shifangxian, and is illustrated in Celadons from Longquan
 Kilns, Taipei, 1998, p. 166, nos. 137-1 and 137-2. Another example
 in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, is included in Illustrated
 Catalogue of Sung Dynasty Porcelain in the National Palace
 Museum, Lung-ch'üan Ware, Ko Ware and Other Wares, Taipei,
 1974, pls. 17 and 18.

 南宋 龍泉青釉笠式盌
 來源:
 (another view with box)  (another view with box)
 日本關西茶道大師, 活躍於1970年代(傳)
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