Arts d'Asie

Arts d'Asie

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 51. A finely carved jichimu and boxwood inlaid, zitan-framed ‘landscape’ panel Qing dynasty, Qianlong period | 清乾隆 紫檀框嵌雞鶒木及黃楊木雕山水樓閣圖掛屏.

Property from a French family collection, Brittany | 法國私人收藏

A finely carved jichimu and boxwood inlaid, zitan-framed ‘landscape’ panel Qing dynasty, Qianlong period | 清乾隆 紫檀框嵌雞鶒木及黃楊木雕山水樓閣圖掛屏

Auction Closed

December 9, 03:41 PM GMT

Estimate

100,000 - 150,000 EUR

Lot Details

Description

Property from a French family collection, Brittany

A finely carved jichimu and boxwood inlaid, zitan-framed ‘landscape’ panel

Qing dynasty, Qianlong period


depicting a vernacular mountainous landscape composed of steep rocks from which pine trees, paulownias and weeping willows grow, the landscape animated by pagodas, palaces and bridges, the background treated in a subtle gradation going from deep blue, to white and then to ochre-green, the back of the panel lacquered in black, the zitan frame sculpted with a frieze of ruyi

102.7 x 70.9 cm, 40⅜ in. by 27⅞ in.

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Collection particulière française

Important panneau impérial en bois de buis et jichimu sculptés incrustés dans un cadre en zitan, dynastie Qing, époque Qianlong

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法國私人收藏

清乾隆 紫檀框嵌雞鶒木及黃楊木雕山水樓閣圖掛屏

Please note that the inlaid wood from which the mountains are carved is jichimu and not bamboo as wrongly stated in the catalogue. / Veuillez noter que le bois incrusté dans lequel les montagnes sont sculptées est du jichimu et non du bambou comme indiqué incorrectement dans le catalogue./敬請注意,掛屏山石部分應為雞翅木,拍品介紹誤作竹雕。
Hotel des ventes de Vannes, Etude Ruellan, 18th May 2002, lot 235.

瓦訥市拍賣場,Ruellan拍賣行,2002年5月18日,編號235

Hanging screens either carved from wood or inlaid in various materials became popular pieces of furniture in the early Qing dynasty. Often displayed in pairs or in sets, these panels adorned many halls and rooms in the private quarters of the Forbidden City or preserved in the Imperial summer retreat in Chengde where several great examples of these landscape decorative panels are preserved. Conceived as highly engaging three-dimensional paintings, hanging screens began to be produced in the Kangxi reign, but peaked in popularity during the Qianlong period, when they were made in a variety of media. The most sophisticated examples were made in the Zaobanchu (Imperial Palace Workshop), where skilled artisan often collaborated to create the most innovative works of art for the imperial court.


The frame of finely carved zitan, the most valued timber available to wood carvers and furniture makers, makes this panel particularly special. Zitan was the favoured timber of the Ming and Qing court, and its long growth period and limited availability made it especially valuable. Its silky texture and fine dense grain made it ideal for intricate carving as it allowed craftsmen to successfully capture texture, evident here in the rendering of distant hills and rocks. The subtle and deep lustre of the wood and its characteristic chestnut colour, which turns purplish-black after prolonged exposure to air, was fully exploited on this panel through its contrast with the lighter boxwood and coloured background.


Compare several related composite wood inlaid panels preserved in the imperial summer retreat in Chengde, published on....

Another related panel with a landscape carved from hongmu is preserved in the Palace Museum, Beijing, accession no. 故00210623. See also two table screens inlaid mainly in zitan, also in the Palace Museum, accession nos 故00209206 and 故00209215; and a much larger throne screen illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures in the Palace Museum. Furniture of the Ming and Qing Dynasties, Hong Kong, 2002, pl. 201.


The companion panel to this panel sold in these rooms, 11th December 2020, lot 90.


accession no. 00210623:


https://digicol.dpm.org.cn/cultural/detail?id=2b0286d5462a4e68aa5bf0d6844def48


accession no 故00209206


https://digicol.dpm.org.cn/cultural/detail?id=618d76b1c4cf49b8945e862e02395f1f


accession no故00209215


https://digicol.dpm.org.cn/cultural/detail?id=0bb13cac3b7644cc937fe047dbe12c2b


掛屏嵌飾紫檀等浮雕,秀石蒼松,層次分明,靜中帶動,精緻入微,足見匠心獨運。嵌寶掛屏,有見以各式材質製者,浮雕立體,栩栩如生,康熙始見,乾隆盛行,大多一雙或成套而造,紫禁城內廳堂房閣時有見之,當中又以造辦處御製為佳。


紫檀材稀,極為珍罕,此屏大量採之,尤顯其貴。紫檀因其質地絲滑如玉,紋絡縝密,光澤含蓄,深受明清宮廷所喜,但生長週期漫長,是以可用之材有限。紫檀久置色深,黝黑泛紫,藝匠利用其色澤沉穩,交代遠山疊巒,與天藍色地,或黃楊木孤舟小橋、亭台樓閣的對比鮮明。


相對紅木,以紫檀嵌飾的掛屏極為罕見。參考北京故宮藏嵌紅木掛屏(故 00210623),另可比較該院藏兩面嵌紫檀插屏(故 00209206、故 00209215),或一座尺寸碩大的屏風,收錄在《故宮博物院藏文物珍品全集.明清家具》,香港,2002,圖版201。


故 00210623:

https://digicol.dpm.org.cn/cultural/detail?id=2b0286d5462a4e68aa5bf0d6844def48


故 00209206:

https://digicol.dpm.org.cn/cultural/detail?id=618d76b1c4cf49b8945e862e02395f1f


故 00209215:

https://digicol.dpm.org.cn/cultural/detail?id=0bb13cac3b7644cc937fe047dbe12c2b