Page 149 - Blum Feinstein Tanka collection HIMALAYAN Art Bonhams March 20 2024
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION NEW YORK
           400
           A REVERSE-GLASS MIRROR PAINTING OF THE DRAGON BOAT  One of the most popular of the yearly Chinese festivals, Duanwu
           FESTIVAL                                          (Dragon Boat Festival) is celebrated on the fifth day of the fifth month.
           19th century, circa 1850-1880                     Originally celebrated to ensure a good harvest, many folk stories and
           The lively scene set on a riverbank with Zhong Kui (the demon queller)   myths developed concerning its origin. One of the most popular relates
           standing on the prow of a festival cart fashioned as a 'dragon boat'   to the death of Qu Yuan, a Warring States period poet who threw
           gaily decorated with multiple banners and carrying a group of male   himself in the river after the fall of the Chu capital by the Qin in 278
           celebrants with well-dressed females holding silk ribbons tied to the   BC. Tradition holds that boatmen often throw rice cakes in the river to
           wheels of the cart, the scene rendered with rich opaque pigments on   the fish and spirits to scare them away from Qu's body. This activity
           the mirrored surface.                             precipitated the popularity of dragon boat racing, and the origin of
           23 1/2in x 31 3/4in (59.8cm x 80.8cm); 29 1/8in x 37 5/8in (74cm x   making and eating zongzi (rice cake dumplings), a popular food during
           95.7cm) with frame                                this event.
           $8,000 - 12,000                                   Zhong Kui, the demon queller, is associated with this festival as an
                                                             agent to combat evil spirits associated with illness and the struggle
           十九世紀 約1850-1880年 端午龍舟遊河圖鏡畫                        between yin and yang. He is seen in this painting on the bow of the
                                                             boat as the chief protector. Plants, herbs, and charms were also used
                                                             to repel the dark forces.
                                                             The long sashes carried by the gaily dressed women may allude to
                                                             the tradition of weaving them from the five colors of the elements, as a
                                                             charm to be worn during this event.
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