Page 51 - 2019 October Important Chinese Ceramics Sotheby's Hong Kong
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triking for its magnificent large size, this charger is covered in a rich and even sea-green glaze, the luminosity of which has been
accentuated by the lack of surface decoration. Vessels of this fine quality and exceptional dimensions were made in the Longquan
S kilns from the late 14th century, under the supervision of the Ming court.
Dishes of this size are rare and only a small number of related examples is known: a reconstructed dish excavated at the imperial
Longquan kilns at Chuzhou, Zhejiang province, is illustrated in Ye Yingting and Hua Yunong, Faxian. Da Ming Chuzhou Longquan
guanyao [Discovery. Imperial ware of the great Ming dynasty from Longquan in Chuzhou], Hangzhou, 2005, pl. 6; one was sold in
these rooms, 5th October 2016, lot 3639; a slightly larger one in the Idemitsu Museum of Arts, Tokyo, was included in the Museum’s
exhibition Gen Min no tōji [Yuan and Ming ceramics], Tokyo, 1977, cat. no. 157; and another from the collection of Cargill and Donna
MacMillan, was sold in our New York rooms, 8th May 1981, lot 254, and again at Christie’s New York, 26th March 2010, lot 1356.
Large chargers were made at the Longquan kilns from as early as the Yuan dynasty (1279-1368), and were designed predominantly
for export. In the early Ming dynasty, such vessels played an important role in the formation of tributary relations between the Ming
imperial court and foreign powers. Large chargers were uniquely adapted to Middle Eastern dining customs, and a significant number
of chargers is in the collection of the Ottoman Sultans, now preserved in the Topkapi Saray Museum, Istanbul. A miniature depicting
their use at a feast held in Topkapi Saray, Istanbul, in the 17th century is illustrated in Regina Krahl, Chinese ceramics in the Topkapi Saray
Museum, Istanbul, ed. John Ayers, London, 1986, vol. 1, p. 45.
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