Page 163 - 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



 The extraordinary effect of this glaze is achieved by applying an
 opaque stippled turquoise glaze colored with copper and made opaque
                                th
 by mixing the arsenic as an opacifier. Rose Kerr noted in Chinese   Bonsai arrived in Japan in the 8 century and the style of Bonsai today   in a 1957 auction organized by the Tokyo Bonsai Club of over four-
                            th
 Ceramics, Porcelain of the Qing dynasty, London, 1986, p. 88, that   was formed around the 13 century. Bonsai was first practiced and   hundred Bonsai wares from an anonymous Japanese family collection.
 while visual examination reveals there to be two distinctive types of   appreciated by Buddhist monks, the aristocracy, and the samurai, but by   It was then passed down through collectors and connoisseurs to the
                 th
              th
 robin’s-egg glaze, one streaked with copper-red and the other stippled   the 18 -19 centuries, became a popular pursuit for the Japanese people.   present owner, Nobuyoshi Ikeda. Ikeda has been a bonsai practitioner
 with blotches of turquoise and dark blue, further analysis is required   The highest quality Bonsai have been regarded as unique collectors’   for 35 years, winning first prize four times in the Kokufu Bonsai
 to clarify the chemistry of these glazes. The robin’s-egg glaze was a   items since the Meiji period, and have been appreciated by renowned   ten, the oldest and most prestigious bonsai contest in Japan. Ikeda
 monochrome glaze first invented in the Yongzheng reign. The peacock-  Japanese connoisseurs of art such as Iwasaki Yanosuke, Nezu Kaichiro   possesses many bonsai, including one registered as kicho bonsai, a title
 feather glaze appears to be closely related to the more common robin’s-  and Nakano Chutaro.  given by the Nippon Bonsai Association in order to preserve bonsai of
 egg glaze, but the former is much rarer, possibly due to the difficulty in   exquisite aesthetic value and academic importance. Since acquiring the
 successfully achieving its desired effect.  After the Xinhai Revolution of 1911, a number of Chinese Yixing wares   present jardinière, Ikeda has appreciated it both as an important work
          were imported into Japan to be used as bonsai pots. The present   of art from the Qing imperial kilns as well as for its subtle beauty and
 Peacock feather-glazed jardinières of this exact form are very rare. The   jardinière likely came to Japan during this period, and was later sold   historical importance in both China and Japan.
 closest example is the Yongzheng-marked celadon-glazed example of
 comparable size (22.8 cm. long) with plain sides and ruyi-bracket feet,
 in the Wang Xing Lou Collection, illustrated in Imperial Perfection, The
 Palace Porcelain of Three Chinese Emperors: Kangxi - Yongzheng -
 Qianlong, Hong Kong, 2004, pp. 182-83, no. 67, where it is noted that
 shallow jardinières or penjing (pot landscapes) of this type "were used
 for miniature gardens or single bonsai trees", which were popular in the
 Qing palace. Two other celadon-glazed examples of larger size have
 been published: one (46.2 cm.) that has plain sides and no feet was sold
 at Christie's Hong Kong, 27 May 2009, lot 1889; and the other (37.3
 cm.), raised on three pairs of bracket feet, is illustrated in Qing Imperial
 Monochromes: The Zande Lou Collection, Shanghai, 2005, pp. 60-61,
 no. 13.

 For an example of a robin’s egg-glazed jardinière of round lobed form,
 see an example illustrated in Treasures from Japan: Masterpieces of
 Chinese Ceramics from Yamanaka & Co., Ltd. and other Japanese
 Collections, Beijing, 2019, p. 107, no. 107. The inspiration for the shape
 of the present and Wang Xing Lou jardinières may have been Song
 dynasty prototypes, such as the rectangular Jun example in the Qing
 Court Collection, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures
 Nobuyoshi Ikeda, photographed in his garden with a bonsai tree that is reputedly 1500-  of the Palace Museum - 32 - Porcelain of the Song Dynasty (I), Hong
 2000 years old.
 池田П良,攝於Ւ庭७中,與ˏ盆☼有         年歷史ⅲ盆栽樹合影ǐ  Kong 1996, p. 23, pl. 19, which also has an everted rim and is raised on
 ruyi feet.
 Property from the Collection of Nobuyoshi Ikeda  While the present vessel was originally made in the imperial kilns and
 ⱷ964  intended to function as a jardinière, it has been appreciated among
 Bonsai connoisseurs since its entry into Japan in the mid-twentieth
 A RARE 'PEACOCK FEATHER'-GLAZED   century.
 RECTANGULAR JARDINIÈRE
 YONGZHENG IMPRESSED SEAL MARK AND OF THE PERIOD (1723-1735)  The cultivation of bonsai, (literally ‘tree planted in a dish’) began in
 10w in. (27.7 cm.) wide, Japanese wood box  China more than 2,000 years ago. Gardeners of the Han dynasty (206
 BC-AD 220) replicated real landscapes in miniature, introducing trees,
 $60,000-80,000
 rocky outcrops, rivers and even tiny houses into compositions placed
 PROVENANCE:  in shallow dishes. This branch of art is known as penjing and from
 Private collection, Tokyo, prior to 1957.   it developed the more refined art of bonsai, where an individual tree
 Anonymous family collection, Tokyo; Bonsai Daiuritate-kai (Important Bonsai   becomes the focus of the horticulturist’s efforts. Miniature cypresses,
 Auction), 18 February 1957, no. 32.  plum trees, pines and even bamboos are depicted growing in trays in
 paintings dating from the Tang Dynasty in the 7 century AD.
 th
 LITERATURE:
 Nihon Bonsai Kyudokumiai Soritsu 20 shunen Kinen Shuppann, Bijutsu Bonki
 Meihin Taisei, Bijutsu Bonki Meihin Taisei, Chugoku, Kyoto, 1990, p. 156, no.
 441.
 池田П良珍藏
 清雍正   爐鈞孔雀羽毛釉長方花盆   Ս字篆書印款
 Ϝ源
 東̺私́珍藏,1957年ע
 東̺私́家族珍藏;ǗBonsai Daiuritate kaiǘ,1957年2月18日,編號 32
 ֨ḛ
 ǗNihon Bonsai Kyudokumiai Soritsu 20 shunen Kinen Shuppann, Bijutsu Bonki
 (mark)
 Meihin Taisei, Bijutsu Bonki Meihin Taisei, Chugokuǘ,̺都,1990年,頁156,
 編號441
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