Page 103 - J.J. Lally Chinese Art CHRISTIE'S March 23 2023 NYC
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847 A BLACK-GLAZED BOTTLE VASE
 SONG DYNASTY (AD 960-1279)
 The vase has a pear-shaped body that rises to a tall, slightly flared
 neck with lipped rim, and is covered with a rich brownish-black
 glaze suffused with bluish-tan areas around the sides and ending
 in a sweeping line above the foot.
 13¬ in. (34.6 cm.) high, cloth box
 $20,000-30,000

 PROVENANCE:
 J. J. Lally & Co., New York, no. 4857.
 The elongated pear shape of this vase was produced at
 various kilns in Northern China during the Song dynasty.
 It appears that black-glazed examples are particularly rare.
 For a stoneware vase of this form with black ‘oil-spot’ glaze
 see R. Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection,
 vol. 3 (II), London, 2006, pp. 502-503, no. 1508. See, also, a
 plain Yaozhou celadon vase of a similar form from a Japanese
 collection illustrated in the catalogue Song Ceramics, Asahi
 Shimbun, Tokyo, 1999, p. 54, no. 17, and a Junyao vase of
 similar form in the Percival David Collection, now in the
 British Museum, illustrated in Imperial Taste: Chinese Ceramics
 from the Percival David Foundation, Los Angeles, 1989, p. 38,
 no. 14.

 宋ǭ黑釉膽≡

 Ϝ源
 藍理捷
 紐約
 編號





          848 A RUSSET-PAINTED BLACK-GLAZED                          北宋 金ǭ十Հ世紀ǭ
                PILLOW                                               黑釉鐵鏽花卷草紋須彌座式枕
                NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY-JIN DYNASTY, 12TH CENTURY
                Of elongated octagonal form, the waisted pillow is molded on the   Ϝ源
                lower portion with recessed panels between petal lappet borders   藍理捷
 紐約
 編號
                interrupted by columns at the angles and two figures at the back.
                The slightly concave top is painted in iron-rust brown with a
                feathery floral motif. The flat base is pierced with two vent holes.
                7¡ in. (18.8 cm.) long, cloth box
                $12,000-18,000

                PROVENANCE:
                J. J. Lally & Co., New York, no. 4852.
                Russet-painted black-glazed pillows are rare and it appears that
                the form of this pillow, raised on a waisted base, may be unique.
                Compare a black-glazed bean-shaped pillow painted with two
                large Chinese characters in rust-brown illustrated in Chinese
                Ceramic Pillows from the Yeung Wing Tak Collection, Museum of
                Oriental Ceramics ed., Osaka, 1984, cat. no. 121, p. 156, where
                it is dated 12th century.

                A black-glazed pottery pillow with figural base dated to the
                Jin dynasty, in the Capital Museum Collection, is illustrated by
                Zhang (ed.) in Zhongguo chutu ciqi quanji (Complete Collection
                of Ceramic Art Unearthed in China), vol. 1, Beijing, 2008, no.
                70. See, also, a figural pillow covered in a dark-brown glaze that
                was included in the exhibition, The Silk Road, Treasures of Tang
                China, The Empress Place, Singapore, 1991, p. 140.                        (another view)

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