Page 314 - 2020 Sept Important Chinese Art Sotheby's NYC Asia Week
P. 314
9/2/2020 Important Chinese Art | Sotheby's
were designed as surfaces on which to display cherished antiquities and artifacts, view scroll paintings, practice calligraphy,
painting or perhaps for playing the qin. The present table is an exceptionally rare example of its type; its clean, modern outline
resulting from its straight-edged rectilinear members. Square elements are a feature that appears in the 17th century during the
transitional period between the Ming and Qing dynasty reflecting the artistic freedom and innovation that often accompanies
times of social and political upheaval when old protocols are put to the test and new influences capture the collective imagination.
Trim, smooth-surfaced, square slender members are typically seen on corner-leg tables, for examples of this type see one in Qing
Court Collection illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Furniture of the Ming and Qing
Dynasties (I), Hong Kong 2002, pl. 90 and another in Wang Shixiang, Connoisseurship of Chinese Furniture, Ming and Early Qing
Dynasties, Hong Kong, 1990, pl. B78.
The height, depth and absence of high stretchers of the present form would allow a scholar-artist ample space and the ability to
stand or sit to use the surface for multiple tasks. Completely plain, this simple form with pure lines and clean angles is what first
drew the attention of 20th century furniture historians and connoisseurs. The design is now considered quintessentially iconic.
The present example of near perfect proportions, made in attractively warm brown and amber tones, with a lively-grained single-
panel top, is an example of the best of classic late Ming/early Qing dynasty furniture.
For a closely related table with similarly plain decoration and rectangular legs but molded-edge frame, see Wang
Shixiang, Connoisseurship of Chinese Furniture, Ming and Early Qing Dynasties, Hong Kong, 1990, pl. B115. Other tables of similar
dimensions and form but with rounded members include one from Grace Wu Bruce sold in our Hong Kong rooms, 6th April 2016,
lot 113 and a painting table illustrated in Grace Wu Bruce, Dreams of Chu Tan Chamber and the Romance with Huanghuali Wood,
The Dr. S. Y. Yip Collection of Classic Chinese Furniture, Hong Kong, 1991, cat. no. 22, sold in our Hong Kong rooms, 7th October
2015, lot 130. Another similar example with rounded members, described as a painting table, from the collection of Robert H.
Ellsworth sold at Christie’s New York, 18th March 2015, lot 122 and a two-board top-panel painting table from the same collection
with grooved rectangular legs and square-section stretchers sold at Christie’s New York, 17th March 2015, lot 42.
https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2020/important-chinese-art?locale=en 314/435