Important Chinese Art
Important Chinese Art
Property of a Gentleman 士紳珍藏
Auction Closed
April 22, 07:57 AM GMT
Estimate
700,000 - 900,000 HKD
Lot Details
Description
Property of a Gentleman
A large Langyao bottle vase
Qing dynasty, Kangxi period
士紳珍藏
清康熙 郎窰紅釉長頸瓶
the globular body rising from a short foot to a tall cylindrical neck surmounted by a slightly flared rim, covered overall in a lustrous rich red glaze of crushed raspberry tone thinning below the rim and stopping unevenly above the base, the base applied with a crackled glaze with a faint bluish tint
44.1 cm
Collection of Mr and Mrs Earl Morse, New York, September 1982.
The Greenwald Collection, no. 40.
Christie's New York, 24th/25th March 2011, lot 1780.
Christie's New York, 19th September 2014, lot 886.
Earl Morse 伉儷收藏,紐約,1982年9月
Greenwald 收藏,編號40
紐約佳士得2011年3月24/25日,編號1780
紐約佳士得2014年9月19日,編號886
Gerald M. Greenwald, The Greenwald Collection, Two Thousand Years of Chinese Ceramics, 1996, no. 40.
Gerald M. Greenwald,《The Greenwald Collection, Two Thousand Years of Chinese Ceramics》,1996年,編號40
The term langyao is derived from Lang Tingji, governor of Jiangxi province and supervisor of the imperial kilns from 1705 to 1712, who is known for reviving monochrome glazes, copper-red in particular.
A copper-red vase of this form in the Metropolitan Museum of Art is illustrated by Warren Cox, The Book of Pottery and Porcelain, vol. I, pl. 157 (bottom center) and another with a slightly shorter neck, in the Baur Foundation, is illustrated in the revised Sekai Toji Zenshu / Ceramic Art of the World, vol. 15, Tokyo, 1983, pl. 255, together with a black-glazed bottle in the Victoria and Albert Museum, pl. 251.