Page 252 - J.J. Lally Chinese Art CHRISTIE'S March 23 2023 NYC
P. 252

931 AN IMPERIAL EMBELLISHED-                               清Գ隆ǭ御ㅳ白玉柄鏤空嵌寶金鞘㈛食刀
               JADE HUNTING KNIFE AND
                                                                    Ϝ源
               GOLD SCABBARD                                        香港蘇富比
     年 月 日
 拍品編號
               QIANLONG PERIOD (1736-1795)                          水松⒢山房莫士撝Ⅷ藏
               The slender steel blade is incised with a gilt three-clawed dragon   藍理捷
 紐約
 編號Y
               chasing a flaming pearl near the hilt on either side, and the white
                                                                    展覽
               jade handle is decorated at both ends with bands of faceted square   紐約
 藍理捷
 「雅ㅳ:中國文՞藝ワ」
     年 月     日
               ruby-red glass inlays. The gold scabbard is wrought in openwork
               floral scroll and decorated with similar glass collars at either end,   ֨ḛ
               with the open end further decorated with a small florette and   藍理捷
 《雅ㅳ:中國文՞藝ワ》
 紐約
     年
 編號
               surmounted by a protruding dragon-head tab fitted with a loop
               for suspension. The base of the scabbard and the top of the handle
               have matching inlaid eight-petaled florettes.
               Overall: 12¡ in. (31.5 cm.) long, steel stand, cloth box
               Knife: 10æ in. (27.4 cm.) long
               Scabbard: 8æ in. (22.2 cm.) long
               $70,000-90,000
               PROVENANCE:
               Sotheby's Hong Kong, 8 April 2010, lot 1812.
               Hugh Moss, Shuisongshi Shanfang (Water, Pine and Stone
               Retreat) Collection.
               J. J. Lally & Co., New York, no. x2623.
               EXHIBITED:
               New York, J. J. Lally & Co., Elegantly Made: Art for the Chinese
               Literati, 13-27 March 2020.
               LITERATURE:
               J. J. Lally & Co., Elegantly Made: Art for the Chinese Literati,
               New York, 2020, no. 23.



                                                                    The current type of knife was originally used as a hunting knife
                                                                    by the Manchus, although intricately decorated versions such as
                                                                    the present example were more likely intended for ceremonial
                                                                    use by the Qing Emperors or high-ranking Manchu nobles.
                                                                    A Qianlong-period imperial knife with jade handle and gold
                                                                    scabbard decorated with turquoise, coral and lazurite inlays in the
                                                                    Palace Museum, Beijing, is illustrated by C. Ho and B. Bronson
                                                                    in Splendors of China’s Forbidden City: The Glorious Reign of Emperor
                                                                    Qianlong, Chicago, 2004, p. 201, no. 248, where an alternative
                                                                    use is noted: “The use of personal knives at meals was a mark of
                                                                    Manchu identity. When eating sacrificial pork, not only men but
                                                                    also women were expected to cut up their own meat.” These small
                                                                    knives are known to have been worn suspended from the belt.
                                                                    A similar knife and scabbard suspended from an imperial court
                                                                    belt is illustrated ibid. p. 59, fig. 52 and another is shown in a detail
                                                                    image from an official portrait of the Qianlong emperor in full
                                                                    regalia, p. 59, fig. 53.

                                                                    Two other ceremonial court belts from the Qing dynasty with
                                                                    suspended accessories including similar knives in fitted scabbards
                                                                    are in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, and illustrated in
                                                                    Qing dai fushi zhanlan tulu (Catalogue of the Exhibition of Ch’ing
                                                                    Dynasty Costume Accessories), Taipei, 1986, pp. 114-15, nos. 32
                                                                    and 33.





                                    (another view)

       250                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    251
   247   248   249   250   251   252   253   254   255   256   257