Page 244 - Chinese porcelains collected by Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Taft, Cincinnati, Ohio, by John Getz
P. 244
A CATALOGUE OF
No. 72
Tall Cylindrical Vase (companion to No. 7 1 ), with sloping shoulders and
attenuated neck, flaring slightly toward the upper rim. White hard-
texture porcelain, of fine quality.
The embellishment presents a spirited warrior subject, including a rocky landscape
and detached cliff-like formations, in relief and carefully picked out in brilliant colors of
the " famille verte " variety with gilding, upon a uniformly white glazed ground.
Two mdistinct groups of armed horsemen, full charge toward each other, are con-
fronted by the appearance of wild animals, including the burly rishi giant Chung-kwei(?)/
A banner shown by one of the groups bears the mysrical symbol "Yang and Yin."
Fragments of rocky landscape with conventional clouds concludes the raised and colored
decoration.
The shoulder is decorated with a brocaded arabesque design in red, involving chrysan-
themums and four white reserve vignettes or panels showing a separate treatment of
flowers and fruit, and a small green scalloping finishes the outer edge.
The neck is encircled, at the shoulder, by a green and black fret band, and two small
scalloped borders form a center division that sustains a red and gold dragon amid clouds
and flames in low relief.
The upper rim is bordered by a fret design penciled in red, and the foot is finished by
an involuted band of spear-heads.
Produced in the eighteenth century (probably toward the end of the reign of K'ang-
hsi).
Height, 29 '/4 inches.
Diameter, 8 inches.
A He^ favorite myth of the Chinese. was supposed to be a ghostly protector of the Emperor
Ming Hwang (7 1 3-762 A.D.), and is sometimes shown riding upon a lion or tiger.
[941