Page 127 - Christie's Asia Week March 2024 Chinese Art
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IMPORTANT CHINESE ART INCLUDING THE COLLECTION OF DOROTHY TAPPER GOLDMAN                     重要中४藝術暨高曼珍藏





          ⱷ936
          A CARVED LONGQUAN CELADON DISH                      明十̩ 十Սˠ紀   龍泉⒋青釉折沿盤
          MING DYNASTY, 15TH-16TH CENTURY
          15æ in. (40 cm.) diam., Japanese wood box
          $5,000-7,000

          Three very similar Longquan celadon dishes of comparable size are in
          the National Palace Museum, Taipei, and are illustrated by Tsai Mei-fen,
          ed., in Green-Longquan Celadon of the Ming Dynasty, Taipei, 2009,
          pp. 84-7, nos. 36-8.










































 ⱷ935
 A CARVED LONGQUAN CELADON STEM CUP  The flared stem of this stem cup is divided into three sections by
 YUAN DYNASTY (1279-1368)  horizontal ribs in imitation of a stalk of bamboo. As noted by J.
 Harrison-Hall in Ming Ceramics in the British Museum, London,
 4q in. (11.5 cm.) diam., Japanese wood box
 2001, p. 463, “bamboo is assigned Confucian qualities which are much
 $4,000-6,000  admired in a man – it does not break under pressure, and is constant,
 never losing its colour even in adverse conditions.” Harrison-Hall
 illustrates, pp. 463-64, nos. 16:2-16:5, four Longquan celadon stem
 元   龍泉⒋青釉ח花高足盃  cups with similar “bamboo” stems, all of which are dated Yuan to
 Ming dynasty, c. 1300-1400. The bowls of the stem cups illustrated by
 Harrison-Hall, however, are all plain, unlike the bowl of the current
 stem cup which is carved with petal lappets.





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