Page 56 - 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


       The present figure is remarkable for the fine quality of the yellow stone and the meticulously executed carving, which is an
       impressive display of the exceptional standard of jade craftsmanship during the height of the Qing dynasty. Apart from the
       present lot, a closely related yellow jade carving of an egret grasping a lotus sprig, attributed to the Qianlong period, is recorded
       in the Woolf Collection (see The Woolf Collection of Chinese Jade, London, 2013, pl. 105). Yellow jade was much treasured during
       the 18th century, particularly by the Qianlong Emperor, whose imperial jade collection surpassed that of any of his predecessors in
       quality. The Qianlong emperor's contribution to the improvement of jade crafting techniques and his connoisseurship of jades
       were notable. He insisted on examining every piece of jade in the court collection and recorded his opinion in the form of poems to
       be published or inscribed on the jades (Yang Boda, 'Jade: Emperor Ch'ien Lung's Collection in the Palace Museum, Peking', Arts of
       Asia, March-April 1992, p. 82.).


       Water birds grasping a lotus flower was a popular subject for jade carvings during the 18th century. For related examples, see a
       white jade duck from the Mary and George Bloch Collection, sold in our Hong Kong rooms, 23rd October 2005, lot
       60; another sold in these rooms, 27th February 1981, lot 477; and a pair sold in our London rooms, 6th November 1973, lot
       346. Carvings in yellow jade of this subject, however, are particularly rare; for a yellow jade example featuring a different subject
       from the same period, see a carving of a recumbent horse, gifted to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York by Florence and
       Herbert Irving, sold in these rooms, 10th September 2019, lot 100.


       The present bird, depicted with a long beak, a slender crown feather, and long legs with talons, can be identified as
       an egret. Together with the lotus flower, it conveys an auspicious symbolic meaning of wishing one to succeed entirely on every
       level of the civil service examination, as in the Chinese language, a single egret is homophonous with the phrase yilu (all the way),
       and the lotus plant is the pun for lianke (passing every level of the civil examination).


       本品把件玉料上乘,雕工精細,展示清代玉匠臻藝,刻劃白鷺,與蓮花並置,諧音「一路連科」,祝願科舉高中。除本品外,另見一黃玉
       近例,雕白鷺銜蓮枝,斷代乾隆,伍夫收藏(見《伍夫收藏中國玉器展覽》,倫敦,2013年,圖版105)。十八世紀,黃玉深受珍重,尤
       受乾隆皇帝青睞,其御藏美玉冠絕歷代各朝。乾隆皇帝在位期間,玉雕工藝發展長足,乾隆帝本人鑑賞玉器心得獨到,堅持每件玉雕親自
       審視,並提詩讚美,或載於文獻,或刻於玉雕之上(楊伯達,〈Jade: Emperor Ch'ien Lung's Collection in the Palace Museum,
       Peking〉,《亞洲藝術》,1992年3至4月,頁82)。


       刻劃水鳥蓮花之紋飾,流行於十八世紀。比較一白玉寶鴨例,出自瑪麗及莊智博收藏,售於香港蘇富比2005年10月23日,編號60;另一
       例售於紐約蘇富比1981年2月27日,編號477;再比一對例,售於倫敦蘇富比1973年11月6日,編號346。相近紋飾之黃玉例則甚罕;比較
       同時期其它題材黃玉作例,如見一臥馬例,由佛羅倫斯及赫伯特•歐雲伉儷惠贈予紐約大都會藝術博物館,售於紐約蘇富比2019年9月10
       日,編號100。

































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