Page 80 - Robert Youngman Collection Of Chinese Jade March 2019 Sotheby's
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The Confucian parable of Zhou Yanzi (alternately known as Zhou Yanci, Zhou Tanzhi, or Zhou Tanzi) originates
                    from a Chinese folk tale. The story of filial piety describes a boy whose elderly parents began to lose their sense
                    of sight and claimed that the milk of a doe would restore their vision. In an effort to reverse their impending
                    blindness, Yanzi bravely cloaked himself in a deerskin and roamed amidst the herd in disguise to collect the
                    potent milk. His selfless act of devotion earned him a place as one of the twenty-four Confucian paragons of
                    filial piety.
                    The present carving identifies Yanzi with his usual attributes: the milk pail and the deerskin. From the reverse,
                    only the animal’s body can be seen, alluding to the efficacy of his disguise and Yanzi’s success in completing his
                    mission. In addition to capturing the essential features of the story in this succinct carving, the artisan has also
                    made excellent use of the inherent qualities of the stone. The luminous yellow sections of the jade highlight the
                    hero, while the naturally dark ‘skin’ of the stone maps onto the hide of the deer both distinguishing it from the
                    figure and contributing a realistic coloration to the animal’s coat.
                    A Song dynasty celadon and russet jade carving of this subject, from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
                    N. Foster, was included in Chinese Jade: The Image from Within, Pacific Asia Museum, Pasadena, 1986, cat.
                    no. 82a; a Ming dynasty version in white and russet jade is in the collection of the Freer Sackler Galleries,
                    Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., acc. no. S1987.759; a white jade iteration attributed to the Ming
                    dynasty was included in Chinese Jade: An Important Private Collection, Spink & Son, London, 1991, cat. no.
                    120; a white and brown jade carving of this subject from the Qing dynasty was sold in our Paris rooms, 10th
                    June 2014, lot 35; and a 17th century celadon and russet jade example sold in these rooms, 17th September 2003,
                    lot 128.





























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