Page 50 - 2020 Sept 22 Junkunc_ Chinese Jade Carvings _ Sotheby's NYC Asia Week
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9/2/2020                                       Junkunc: Chinese Jade Carvings | Sotheby's


       Deftly modeled in the round, this charming sculpture depicts a reclining buffalo, a symbol of strength and tranquillity, a classic
       subject in Chinese painting. When portrayed with a young boy riding on its back, this motif represents obedience and serenity, as
       well as spring and agriculture because of its role in pulling ploughs.


       Compare a white jade carving, but fashioned with the buffalo’s head turned towards its tail, sold twice at Christie’s Hong Kong,
       18th May 1989, lot 748, and again 28th October 2002, lot 616. A related figure, but with the boy holding a spray of millet, was
       included in the exhibition A Romance with Jade from the De An Tang Collection, Palace Museum, Beijing, 2004, cat. no. 79; a
       slightly smaller example was sold in these rooms, 8th October 2010, lot 2800; and another was sold at Christie's London,
       4th November 2008, lot 7. See also a carving depicting a boy on a standing buffalo illustrated in Zhongguo yuqi quanji [Complete
       collection of Chinese jades], vol. 6, Shijiazhuang, 1993, pl. 265.

       A popular motif from the Song dynasty (960-1279), the poets Su Shi and Huang Tingjian (1045-1105) and their painter friend Li
       Gonglin (c. 1041-1106) are among those first associated with this theme. From the 11th century, buffalo herd-boys exemplified for
       many scholars and officials the simple life far away from ceremony, ritual and social obligation. See a hanging scroll painted by Li
       Tang (c. 1050-after 1130), Herd Boy with Water Buffalo and Calf (11th or 12th century), in the National Palace Museum, Taipei,
       published in Ann Elizabeth Barrott Wicks (ed.), Children in Chinese Art, Honolulu, 2002, p. 54, fig. 2.6. Two mottled jade carvings
       attributed to the Song and Yuan periods, from the Victor Shaw Collection, were included in the exhibition Chinese Jades from Han
       to Ch'ing, Asia Society, New York, 1980, cat. nos 46 and 47, together with a white jade carving of two boys and a buffalo, from the
       Gerald Godfrey Collection, cat. no. 48.


       本品青玉童子牧牛擺件,雕工精湛,構思巧妙,意境平和恬逸。童子騎牛,為中國書畫經典題材,寓意寧靜順從。

       比較一白玉作例,水牛作顧首狀,兩度售於香港佳士得,先後為1989年5月18日,編號748及2002年10月28日,編號616。另比一例,刻
       劃童子手持穗稈,曾展於《玉緣•德安堂藏玉展》,故宮博物院,北京,2004年,編號79;另一例尺寸較小,售於紐約蘇富比2010年10
       月8日,編號2800;再比一例,售於倫敦佳士得2008年11月4日,編號7。尚有一例,刻劃水牛童子立像,圖載於《中國玉器全集》,卷
       6,石家莊,1993年,圖版265。


       童子牧牛題材,流行於宋代,最先以此為題的文人包括蘇軾、黃庭堅以及其好友李公麟。十一世紀開始,童子牧牛主題成為遠離世俗煩
       囂、禮儀及公務,追求簡樸生活之代表。台北國立故宮博物院收藏李唐童子水牛及乳牛圖手卷(作於十一或十二世紀),載於 Ann
       Elizabeth Barrott Wicks 編,《Children in Chinese Art》,檀香山,2002年,頁54,圖2.6。參考兩玉雕例,斷代宋、元,出自Victor
       Shaw 收藏,曾展於《Chinese Jades from Han to Ch'ing》, Asia House Gallery,紐約,1980,編號 46及47,該展並包括一白玉例,
       刻劃兩童子與水牛,出自 Gerald Godfrey 收藏,編號48。

































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