Page 145 - Sothebys HK Dragon Emperor April 2024
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CALMING THE IMPERIAL EYE


 A piece of monochrome porcelain had to have exceptional   clouds, it exerts a calming authority and a reassuring power.
 qualities to stand its ground among the flood of exuberant   That it is anything but static is apparent by the waves below,
 yangcai (‘foreign colour’) wares, with their profusion of   which the animal seems to have agitated into gushing and
 enamel colours and gilding, which the imperial kilns sent   splattering crests. If the viewer was the Emperor, he would
 to the court for the Qianlong Emperor (r. 1736-1795).   undoubtedly have seen in this design a flattering image of his
 While the appeal of yangcai is to dazzle the eye with the   own persona, mirrored in all its glory.
 greatest number of visual stimuli that could be fitted onto   What makes this decoration so memorable are the complex
 the porcelain surface, the present flask works in exactly the   techniques that have been applied to achieve the striking
 opposite way. And as the court was filled with an abundance   chiaroscuro effect. Rather than just consisting of the
 of bright ornament not only on its porcelains but also on its   customary two dimensions of raised relief against flat
 furniture, its fabrics and all other works of art, an object as   ground, it is built of a multitude of layers. The basic design
 serene and calming as the present flask must have been a   is created by moulding, by pressing the sides of the flask
 highly welcome focus on which to repose a tired eye.  into a carefully carved mould, which already worked with
 The inspiration for the present flask may have come from an   several depths to create the basic silhouette of the design in
 earlier design, for example, from a celadon moon flask with   relief and rendering details at varying heights, some further
 lotus scrolls of Yongzheng mark and period (1723-1735),   raised, some further recessed. Details too fine to come out
 of which one example is in the Palace Museum (Qing Kang   clearly by the moulding process have then been incised into
 Yong Qian ming ci tezhan/Catalog of the Special Exhibition of   the porcelain surface, some into the relief, like the dragons’
 K’ang-hsi, Yung-cheng and Ch’ien-lung Porcelain Ware from   manes and the undulating rhythm of the waves, and some
 the Ch’ing Dynasty in the Palace Museum, Palace Museum,   into the flat ground, like fine splashes of water issuing from
 Taipei, 1986, no. 61), and two examples have been sold in   the waves.
 our rooms (one, from the collections of Sir Frederick Bruce,   Other details, considered important but apparently deemed
 G.C.B., Robert C. Bruce, and Raymond F.A. Riesco, sold in   not prominent enough in the moulded relief, were in addition
 London 12th May 1953, lot 96 and 11th December 1984, lot   emphasized – and raised even further – by the application
 437, and in New York, 17th September 2014, lot 157; the   of white slip as, for example, the dragons’ eyes, claws and
 other in these rooms, 8th October 2006, lot 1005 and 7th   certain other physical features, the flames and splashing
 April 2015, lot 114; fig. 1). A comparison clearly shows how   drops of water. Under the transparent glaze the relief design
 in the Qianlong period form, decoration technique and glaze   therefore appears in a multitude of fractionally different
 tone were amended and improved.  shades that create a three-dimensional effect without
 At first glance, this vessel is simply an expanse of the most   spoiling the admirable evenness of the celadon tone. While
 delicate, bluish green. The shape is unpretentious, superbly   the dragon exerts its powerful overall impact from any
 proportioned, majestic, and very elegant. ‘Moon flasks’   distance, in order to appreciate the decoration in all its
 mostly have larger, sometimes cylindrical necks, more   intricacy, the flask needs to be inspected close up.
 prominent and ornate handles, often stand on a proper foot,   No other flask of this design appears to be recorded and
 and the body can be oval, peach-shaped or even octagonal.   in light of its complexity it is not surprising that similar
 On this flask, the form is admirably simple, with a very small   dragon decoration was rarely undertaken altogether. A large
 neck, shaped like a flower bud, almost plain handles, just   tianqiuping with a related relief design of dragons under
 suggesting longevity mushrooms, and a fully-round profile,   a fenqing glaze, but the dragons depicted in motion and
 just very slightly flattened at the base to enable a firm stand   having three claws only, is in the Palace Museum, Beijing,
 for the vessel – a shape that truly evokes a full moon.  illustrated in Gugong zhencang Kang Yong Qian ciqi tulu/
 The amazing shade of the celadon glaze in this case   Kangxi, Yongzheng, Qianlong. Qing Porcelain from the Palace
 contributes to the effect. When working for the Yongzheng   Museum Collection, Hong Kong, 1989, pl. 144. Two large vats
 Emperor, the potters at Jingdezhen began to expand the   with five-clawed dragons moving through clouds under a
 range of their glaze colours by creating with absolute   celadon glaze, but executed in carved relief, both unmarked
 precision varying tones of existing glazes. Three Qianlong   and attributed to the Yongzheng period, are in the Palace
 celadon-glazed vessels in the Palace Museum, Beijing, all   Museum, Beijing, and in the Shanghai Museum, respectively,
 with dragon designs in relief but with three different types of   illustrated in Zhongguo taoci quanji [Complete series on
 celadon glaze are illustrated in Gugong zhencang Kang Yong   Chinese ceramics], Shanghai, 2000, vol. 14, pl. 214; and in
 Qian ciqi tulu/Kangxi, Yongzheng, Qianlong. Qing Porcelain   Zhou Lili, Shanghai Bowuguan zangpin yanjiu daxi/Studies of
 from the Palace Museum Collection, Hong Kong, 1989, pp.   the Shanghai Museum Collections: A Series of Monographs.
 460-62, pls 142-4. The three tones are distinguished by the   Qingdai Yongzheng – Xuantong guanyao ciqi [Qing imperial
 terms ‘Longquan’, denominating a strong yellowish green   porcelain from Yongzheng to Xuantong], Shanghai, 2014, pl.
 reminiscent of Ming-dynasty Longquan wares; dongqing,   3-32.
 ‘winter green’, for a deep bluish green; and fenqing, ‘powder   Until 1981 the present flask belonged to Irene and Earl Morse
 blue’ or ‘powder green’, for the present type, of the palest   of New York, who had assembled a large and important
 bluish/greenish tint. It is a clean, pure, fresh pastel colour   collection of Chinese art, which included paintings, sculpture,
 not created by admixture of opaque white enamel, like most   bronzes, porcelains and other works. Their paintings have
 other pastel tones at the time, but by letting the translucent   been exhibited at the Art Museum of Princeton University
 glaze play with the white porcelain body underneath. It   (Roderick Whitfield, In Pursuit of Antiquity. Chinese Paintings
 is an otherwordly tint hardly found in nature and thus   of the Ming and Ch’ing Dynasties from the Collection of Mr
 exceptionally well suited to evoke the mysterious glow of a   and Mrs Earl Morse, Rutland, VT and Tokyo, 1969); their
 full moon.  bronzes and other early works of art were included in an
 On both sides of the vessel, a five-clawed dragon is depicted   exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (Virginia Bower
 in majestic poise, facing the viewer head-on, flanked on the   and Robert L. Thorp, Spirit and Ritual. The Morse Collection
 narrow sides by auspicious bats. Superbly arranged on the   of Ancient Chinese Art, New York, 1982). Some of their
 circular space, encircling a big flaming pearl, with flames   sculptures are in the Brooklyn Museum, New York.
 issuing from behind its head, the body partly overlapping


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