Page 52 - Christies Asia Week 2015 Chinese Works of Art
P. 52

Demountable trestle-leg tables, which are made to be easily disassembled to facilitate transport, are
                                 very rare. There appear to be two types of demountable, recessed trestle-leg tables. The first type,
                                 which includes the current table, exhibits straight legs, which are set into shoe feet. The second
                                 variant has everted feet flanking raised aprons, such as the example sold at Christie’s Hong Kong,
                                 27 November 2013, lot 3571. Trestle-leg tables tend to feature long, single-plank tops and thick
                                 members, which makes the massive, single burl-plank of this table exceptionally rare. The natural
                                 knotted qualities of burl would make any panel of this massive size difficult to acquire. It is more
                                 common to find small burl-inset tables, such as one illustrated by R. Jacobsen and N. Grindley,
                                 Classical Chinese Furniture, Minneapolis, 1999, pp. 108-9, no. 34.
                                 The clustered and swirled graining of the burl panel is suggestive of a landscape or abstract painting.
                                 Burl panels were often incorporated into furniture to provide a decorative element, and the aesthetic
                                 created a striking contrast between the textured graining of burl and the amber tones of huanghuali.
                                 When chosen for table tops, the abstract patterning was meant to enhance displays of antiques and
                                 works of art. The natural qualities of the burl would have been attractive to scholars and poets who
                                 have long found inspiration in the natural world.

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