Sotheby’s to Offer Chinese Art from the Metropolitan Museum of Art: The Florence & Herbert Irving Gift
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Auktion06.09.2019
A Finely Carved Large Spinach-Green Jade ‘Immortals’ Brushpot
Qing Dynasty, Qianlong Period
Estimate $500/700,000
This magnificent vessel belongs to a highly refined group of ‘figure-in-landscape’ brush pots, created at the height of the jade production in the Qianlong period (1735-1795). Portraying mythological and historical events, these brush pots are exquisitely carved in green or white jade. The green jade models, particularly the striking spinach-toned examples, appear to have been especially favored by the Qing court.
The present brush pot is an extremely luxurious item for the scholar’s desk and would have made a most desirable birthday gift in view of its popular theme of immortals surrounded by many auspicious elements such as deer and lingzhi. To create such an extravagant work of art, a high- quality boulder of substantial proportions would be essential. Such a boulder would not have been easily available before the Qianlong Emperor’s 1759 conquest of the Western Territories (xiyu), which gave him access to jade-rich Khotan. The number of surviving jade pieces of the Qing dynasty (1644-1911) from the period before 1759 is, in fact, conspicuously small compared to the immense quantity of jade artefacts produced thereafter.
A Rare Celadon and Russet Jade ‘Quail and Millet’ Boulder
Qing Dynasty, Yongzheng / Qianlong Period
Estimate $150/250,000
Expertly fashioned in multiple layers of relief that suggest receding space, this piece is a remarkable example of a jade mountain carving (yushan). Every detail of the design was carefully executed and the craftsman successfully captured the different textures of the design elements: from birds and sprays of millet which give the impression of being modelled entirely in the round, to flowing water in the foreground and overhanging rocks. The scene was designed to maximize the use of the entire boulder so as to waste as little of the precious material as possible.
Jade mountain carvings were kept in scholars’ studios where they provided a means of inspiration and escape from the regulated life of the court through their sense of ethereality and their subject matter. Quails, in China called anchun, are highly auspicious, since ‘an’ is a homophone of the word for peace.
A White and Apple-Green Jadeite ‘Landscape’ Table Screen
Qing Dynasty, Qianlong Period
Estimate $80/120,000
This table screen is striking for the brilliant green tone of the stone from which it was fashioned, and appears to be the pair to a table screen in the collections of R.C. Bruce, H.M. Queen Marie of Yugoslavia, and Sir John Woolf. The natural striations and subtle variations in the stone’s color, which were cleverly incorporated into the design of both screens to depict rippling water, appear to match. Furthermore, the two screens read like extracts from sections of a longer handscroll.
This piece and its pair are also remarkable on account of their detailed depictions of a city, possibly showing two different views of West Lake in in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, the capital city of the Southern Song dynasty (1127-1279). From the Song period through to the Qing dynasty, Hangzhou continued to attract numerous visitors, including the Qianlong Emperor, who visited the city during his Southern Inspection Tours.
A Celadon Jade ‘Luohan’ Inscribed Boulder
Qing Dynasty
Estimate $100/150,000
The present sculpture, carved from a tall jade boulder, capitalizes on the material’s inherent qualities to create a towering stone grotto framing Abheda – a Buddhist luohan – who is seated in solitude with a sutra in hand and a censer burning nearby. The cavernous setting has been expertly crafted to give the impression of raw naturalism, while simultaneously providing the artisan with the requisite surfaces to render the luohan almost completely in the round, and inscribe two accompanying texts above the figure and a third on the reverse of the boulder. As a result, the artist was able to faithfully translate Guanxiu’s (832-912) iconic painting of Abheda into three-dimensional form, incorporating the Qianlong emperor’s annotations on the painting.
A Massive Spinach-Green Jade ‘Dragon’ Washer
Qing Dynasty
Estimate $100/150,000
The present washer, hewn from a massive jade boulder and carved to the exterior with powerful dragons writhing through swirling clouds and turbulent seas, can trace its form to an immense jade basin made 1265 and given to Khubilai Khan. The basin, sometimes referred to as the ‘Du Mountain washer’ or as a wine pot, is the earliest known jade carving of this monumental scale. It is carved from a single block of dark blackish-green jade, and measures approximately half a meter deep and up to 182 cm wide.
A Carved Limestone Head of a Bodhisattva
Sui Dynasty
Estimate $80/120,000
This stone head is sumptuously carved with fleshy cheeks, broad arched brows and a large straight nose that leads the eye down to the plump lips. Its features exemplify a crucial sculptural transition from the linear and structured depictions of bodhisattvas in the preceding Northern Qi (550-577) and Northern Zhou (557-581) periods to the fully rounded and fleshy forms of the Tang (618-907). Its oval face and idealized expression, which exude deep spirituality, display an early attempt at naturalism, while its richly carved crown with suspended beads and floral diamonds is reminiscent of the stern aesthetic of the preceding dynasties.
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06.09.2019Auktion »
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