Chinese Art

Chinese Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 112. A rare yellow-ground and iron-red-decorated 'dragon' bowl, Mark and period of Yongzheng | 清雍正 黃地礬紅彩龍紋盌 《大清雍正年製》款.

Property Sold to Benefit The Newark Museum Acquisition Endowment

A rare yellow-ground and iron-red-decorated 'dragon' bowl, Mark and period of Yongzheng | 清雍正 黃地礬紅彩龍紋盌 《大清雍正年製》款

Auction Closed

March 20, 05:40 PM GMT

Estimate

40,000 - 60,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

the base with a six-character mark in underglaze blue within a double square


Diameter 4⅝ in., 11.8 cm

Collection of Herman A. E. (d.1951) and Paul C. (d. 1951) Jaehne.

Gifted to The Newark Museum, Newark, in 1941 (accession no. 41.1973).


來源:

Herman A. E. (1951年逝) 及 Paul C. (1951年逝) Jaehne 收藏

1941年贈予紐瓦克博物館,紐瓦克 (館藏編號41.1973)

The present bowl is striking for its rare combination of fiercely painted dragons in iron-red enamels on a lustrous yellow ground. Yongzheng bowls of this type are exceptionally rare and only a few have been recorded. See a closely related example illustrated in Chinese Porcelain in the S.C. Ko Tianminlou Collection, Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong, 1987, cat. no. 102; another was included in the Oriental Ceramic Society exhibition Iron in the Fire, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, 1988, cat. no. 80; a third, was sold in these rooms, 30th May 1990, lot 190. A Yongzheng mark and period dish, similarly decorated in iron-red, but on a café-au-lait ground, from the Barbara and Lester Levy Collection, was recently sold in these rooms, 20th September 2023, lot 510.


This type continued to be produced under the Qianlong Emperor, and Qianlong mark and period bowls of this design are more commonly found. See a Qianlong mark and period bowl in the Palace Museum, Beijing (accession no. Gu 152688), illustrated in Kangxi, Yongzheng, Qianlong: Qing Porcelain from the Palace Museum Collection, Hong Kong, 1989, p. 334, pl. 15; another in the Nanjing Museum, included in the exhibition Qing Imperial Porcelain of the Kangxi, Yongzheng and Qianlong Reigns, Nanjing Museum, 1995, cat. no. 84; a further bowl in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (accession no. CIRC.1355-1926), illustrated in Rose Kerr, Chinese Ceramics: Porcelain of the Qing Dynasty 1644-1911, London, 1986, fig. 27; lastly, a pair recently sold in our Hong Kong rooms, 12th October 2021, lot 25.