Page 12 - Fine Chinese Ceramics Sept 2016
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PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF ARCH. IGNAZIO VOK

                        1204
                         A MAGNIFICENT SIX-POST HUANGHUALI CANOPY BED, JIAZICHUANG
                         LATE 16TH-EARLY 17TH CENTURY
                            The mat top is set into a rectangular waistless frame above plain aprons continuing to the
                            rectangular legs with incurving hoof feet. The posts are joined on all sides by openwork railings of
                            wan-design lattice, humpback stretchers, and the rectangular top frame.

                            80æ in. (205.1 cm.) high, 81Ω in. (207 cm.) wide, 41√ in. (106.4 cm.) deep

                            $300,000-500,000

                                       PROVENANCE

                            Grace Wu Bruce, Ltd., Hong Kong.

                                       EXHIBITED

                            Museum für Ostasiatische Kunst, Köln, Pure Form: Classical Chinese Furniture: Vok Collection, 6
                            November 2004 - 28 March 2005.

                                       LITERATURE

                            N. Grindley et al., Pure Form: Classical Chinese Furniture: Vok Collection, Padua, 2004, pl. 39.

                            In the traditional Chinese domestic setting, the bed is among the most important pieces of
                            furniture. Its large size meant that it would dominate the bedroom, and was probably the most
                            expensive item to commission, due to the large amount of timber used. A canopy bed served
                            multiple functions, ofering not only a place to sleep at night but also to act as a center of activity
                            during the day. Curtains were hung from the canopy frame, providing a private, intimate, and
                            warm place to sleep. During the day, the curtains were drawn to the side, and the bed functioned
                            as a couch; sometimes a side table was pulled up to the frame of the bed, or a kang table could be
                            placed directly on the mat itself, ofering a surface for tea or wine, small meals, or board games.

                            In contrast to the day-bed (ta) or couch-bed (luohanchuang), which were often found in men’s
                            scholars studios or bedrooms, the canopy bed was generally associated with the female setting.
                            The canopy bed would have been the most important part of a woman’s dowry when she wed,
                            and in the cases of divorce, was one of the items of property she would have retained. The bed’s
                            most important function in the female setting was for the conception of children, particularly
                            sons. As such, the Lu Ban jing, the Ming-dynasty carpenter’s manual, cites the bed as the only
                            piece of furniture which should be built according to astrological considerations, taking into
                            account, for example, auspicious days of the year to ensure the conception of sons.

                            The form of the canopy bed subtly mirrors traditional Chinese architecture, and likely developed
                            from the application of the same set of skills; many of the complex joins found in Chinese
                            furniture are derived from architectural carpentry techniques. When viewed from the front, the
                            basic form of the six-post canopy bed in particular emulates the appearance of a traditional
                            three-bay building, with the posts standing in for columns and the latticework railings echoing
                            openwork balustrades. The curtains, too, with the ability to easily transition between opened and
                            closed, mimic the removable lattice window screens of a hall, which in summer could be removed
                            to allow the breeze to carry through the room. As such, the bed was in essence a room within a
                            room, allowing for privacy when needed and serving as a social hub during the day.

                            The platform bed as a form was well established as early as the late Eastern Zhou period (770-
                            221 BC), as evidenced by the folding platform bed discovered in tomb no. 2 at the Chu-kingdom
                            site of Baoshan in Hubei province, illustrated by N. Berliner in Beyond the Screen: Chinese
                            Furniture of the 16th and 17th centuries, Boston, 1996, p. 43, fg. 9; in this early example, the
                            openwork railings already resemble the balustrades of a hall. Free-standing canopy frames are
                            known by at least the Western Han period (206 BC-AD 25), and it is only in the Ming dynasty that
                            they become integrated into the frame of the bed itself.

                            The form of the present bed is very rare as only one other known example displays a four-fush-
                            sided base section, that being the huanghuali alcove bed in the collection of the Nelson-Atkins
                            Museum in Kansas City, illustrated by S. Handler in Ming Furniture in the Light of Chinese
                            Architecture, Berkley, 2005, p. 69. There is also a miniature model of an alcove bed from the
                            Ming-dynasty tomb of Pan Yunzheng that closely resembles the Nelson-Atkins example, although
                            with a waisted frame, illustrated by S. Handler, ibid., p. 150, cat. no. 30a. Both examples notably
                            have a similar wan motif in the lattice railings to that of the present bed, which refects a desire
                            for longevity.

                         明十六/十七世紀 黃花梨萬字紋圍子架子床

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