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12 octobre 2011

Kangxi blue and white porcelain of the Inder Rieden Collection @ Bonhams

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A fine blue and white cylindrical brush pot, bitong. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams

Brightly painted with a continuous scene of a gentleman and his attendant enjoying conversation with a lady and her maid in a garden and an elderly lady before a screen waited on by various attendants, the base with a countersunk seal mark Xi Chao Chuan Gu (antique passed down from our glorious dynasty). 18.6cm (7 3/8in) diam. Estimate: £30,000 - 50,000, CNY 300,000 - 490,000, HK$ 360,000 - 600,000

Provenance: Sotheby's London, 16 June 1999, lot 914
The Inder Rieden Collection

The mark of Xi Chao Chuan Gu also appeared on an underglaze blue and copper-red brushpot, Kangxi mark and of the period, sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 2 November 1999, lot 605, where the mark was translated as 'The Court of Kangxi Transmitting Antiquity'.

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A pair of blue and white slender baluster vases. Chenghua six-character marks, Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Each with a spreading foot, brightly painted with similar scenes of a dignitary with attendants and ladies receiving a guest accompanied by servants bearing gifts, the waisted neck with decorative bands of leiwen and key-fret motifs divided by a moulded rib. Each approximately 44cm (17¼in) high (2). Estimate: £30,000 - 50,000, CNY 300,000 - 490,000, HK$ 360,000 - 600,000
 
Provenance: according to the owner, purchased from Glerum Den Haag, Amsterdam, 11 November 1997, lot 225A
The Inder Rieden Collection

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A very fine blue and white baluster vase. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Amusingly painted in contrasting deep and pale blue tones with an old man and a young boy playing with a lively baby dragon darting upwards through cloud scrolls accompanied by a servant and a crane amid rockwork and pine, the collar, waisted neck and rim with decorative bands. 45.8cm (18in) high - Estimate: £25,000 - 40,000, CNY 250,000 - 400,000, HK$ 300,000 - 480,000

Provevance: Sotheby's London, 17 December 1996, lot 86
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A fine blue and white tall slender flaring yenyen vase. Chenghua six-character mark, Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Dramatically painted with six writhing dragons surrounding an empty carriage amid thickly swirling clouds above foaming waves, the flaring neck with a delicate crane flying above high tumultuous waves flooding around a mountain-top pagoda. 45.5cm (18in) high Estimate: £20,000 - 30,000, CNY 200,000 - 300,000, HK$ 240,000 - 360,000

Provenance: Christie's London, 15 June 1998, lot 111
The Inder Rieden Collection

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A fine pair of blue and white slender flaring vases, gu. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Each spreading foot, central rounded body and flaring neck painted with lobed cartouches depicting scenes of small figures in watery landscapes on a wave-pattern ground and small flowers, the interior rim with a geometric-pattern band. 48cm (19in) high (2). Estimate: £20,000 - 30,000, CNY 200,000 - 300,000, HK$ 240,000 - 360,000.
 
Provenance: Christie's London, 15 May 1995, lot 5
The Inder Rieden Collection

For a pair of vases similarly decorated with cartouches against a whorl ground, forming part of a four-piece garniture, see R.Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, Vol.IV (II), London, Catalogue no.1844.
 
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Two blue and white flaring vases, gu. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Each richly painted with continuous scenes of figures in landscapes, the tall spreading foot with fishermen and nets, the central section with fishing boats, and the long neck with groups of scholars in discussion and enjoying chess on a boat accompanied by servants, all divided by hatched-pattern borders. Each approximately 46cm (18 1/8in) high (2). Estimate: £20,000 - 30,000, CNY 200,000 - 300,000, HK$ 240,000 - 360,000
 
Provenance: Christie's London, 16 December 1996, lot 1
The Inder Rieden Collection

Compare a related pair of vases, of similar shape but different decorative bands and scenes, which was sold at Christie's London, 15 May 2007, lot 232.

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A fine blue and white cylindrical vase. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams

The sides boldly painted with three mythical beasts, one with dragon scales, one with tiger stripes and one with leopard spots and each breathing flames, all set in a dramatic landscape of steep rocks and high foaming waves, the neck with decorative bands of ruyi-head, circle and pendent motifs. 40cm (15¾in) high - Estimate: £15,000 - 25,000, CNY 150,000 - 250,000, HK$ 180,000 - 300,000

Provenance: Sotheby's Amsterdam, 22 May 2001, lot 31
The Inder Rieden Collection

A related vase with a similar neck but slightly wider body and depicting a more typical river landscape scene was sold at Sotheby's London, 10 November 2010, lot 85.

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A blue and white 'Buddhistic lions' baluster vase. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Thickly potted and boldly painted around the exterior with three playful Buddhistic lions cavorting with ribboned balls, a ruyi-head band at the collar and a leiwen pattern at the rim. 45cm (17¾in) high Estimate: £15,000 - 25,000, CNY 150,000 - 250,000, HK$ 180,000 - 300,000
 
Provenance: Christie's London, 9 May 1994, lot 62
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white slender baluster vase. Jiajing six-character mark, Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
The tall slender body painted with a continuous scene of a seated official surrounded by various advisors receiving a visiting scholar and his attendants all within a mansion and garden, the waisted neck with two flower sprays. 43.3cm (17 1/8in) high - Estimate: £15,000 - 25,000, CNY 150,000 - 250,000, HK$ 180,000 - 300,000
 
Provenance: Sotheby's London, 8 November 1994, lot 50
The Inder Rieden Collection

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A fine blue and white tall slender baluster vase. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams

Boldly potted with a flaring neck, the body and neck painted with rectangular panels of four different fierce mythical beasts surrounded by a dense circle and dot pattern, divided by bands of zigzag motif and above a row of pendent ruyi-heads around the foot. 44.8cm (17 5/8in) high - Estimate: £10,000 - 15,000, CNY 99,000 - 150,000, HK$ 120,000 - 180,000

Provenance: Sotheby's London, 17 November 1999, lot 916
The Inder Rieden Collection

A vase of similar form in the body and neck but with a shorter foot and depicting slightly different scenes was sold at Sotheby's London, 10 November 2010, lot 86.

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A blue and white yenyen vase. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams

Carefully painted on the lower part with a seated dignitary surrounded by attendants receiving a visiting scholar in a mansion opening onto a terrace, the sharply-flaring neck with a dignitary in the same setting watching a performing archer. 43cm (17in) high - Estimate: £10,000 - 15,000, CNY 99,000 - 150,000, HK$ 120,000 - 180,000

Provenance: The Inder Rieden Collection

Compare a vase of similar form but depicting a different scene, sold at Sotheby's New York, 14 September 2011, lot 122.

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A blue and white flaring vase, gu. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams

Brightly painted with continuous scenes, the spreading foot with dignitaries and servants with ducks, the central section with boys at play, and the flaring neck with a dignitary receiving an official with attendants observed by ladies and soldiers. 44cm (17¼in) high - Estimate: £10,000 - 15,000, CNY 99,000 - 150,000, HK$ 120,000 - 180,000

Provenance: Sotheby's London, 12 November 1996, lot 31
The Inder Rieden Collection

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A large blue and white baluster jar and cover. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
The tall rounded body painted with eight upright lobed panels, each with a branch of varied blossoms including prunus, peony and chysanthemum issuing from rockwork with birds and butterflies in flight, separating the Eight Buddhist Emblems, bajixiang, at the shoulder, and above stiff lappet panels of floral scrolls at the foot, the cover similarly decorated with six panels of flowering branches separating Buddhist symbols. 59.5cm  (23 3/8in) high (2). Estimate: £10,000 - 15,000, CNY 99,000 - 150,000, HK$ 120,000 - 180,000
 
Provenance: Sotheby's Amsterdam, 4 December 2002, lot 44
The Inder Rieden Collection

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A fine blue and white baluster vase. Chenghua six-character mark, Kangxi. Photo Bonhams

Painted all around the slender body with three scholars practising calligraphy attended by servants all set in a dwelling within a garden with a plaintain tree and rocks. 26cm (10¼in) high - Estimate: £8,000 - 12,000, CNY 79,000 - 120,000, HK$ 97,000 - 140,000

Provenance: Christie's London, 6 April 1998, lot 28
The Inder Rieden Collection

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A blue and white pear-shaped bottle vase. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams

The body painted with two arrow vases on tables alternating with sets of pendent emblems with tassels, beneath a decorative lotus band at the shoulder and two spreading floral branches on the tapering neck. 28cm (11in) high - Estimate: £8,000 - 12,000, CNY 79,000 - 120,000, HK$ 97,000 - 140,000

Provenance: The Inder Rieden Collection

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A blue and white baluster vase. Chenghua six-character mark, Kangxi. Photo Bonhams

The gently-rounded sides brightly painted with a continuous scene of an official in a chariot drawn by a buffalo and accompanied by soldiers bearing standards greeting a farmer in a landscape. 26cm (10¼in) high - Estimate: £6,000 - 10,000, CNY 59,000 - 99,000, HK$ 72,000 - 120,000

Provenance: Sotheby's London, 16 May 1995, lot 15
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A pair of blue and white bowls. Kangxi six-character marks and of the period. Photo Bonhams
 
Each exterior painted in a rich blue with scenes of dignitaries and ladies at leisure with various attendants, the interior with boys at play. 20cm (8in) diam. (2). Estimate: £8,000 - 12,000, CNY 79,000 - 120,000, HK$ 97,000 - 140,000
 
Provenance: Christie's Amsterdam, 18 May 1994, lot 59
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white globular long-necked vase. Chenghua six-character mark, Kangxi.
 
The body painted with a continuous scene of a dignitary accompanied by attendants, his horse and chariot, addressing an elderly bearded man fishing alone in a landscape, all below decorative floral sprays issuing from rocks and two birds on the neck. 26cm (10¼in) high - Estimate: £8,000 - 12,000, CNY 79,000 - 120,000, HK$ 97,000 - 140,000
 
Provenance: Christie's London, 7 November 1994, lot 10
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white circular box and cover. Kangxi.
 
The cover finely painted in the central medallion with boys with flags and a qilin, the surrounding border and base with groups of boys playing amongst trees.
11cm (4 3/8in) diam. (2). Estimate: £6,000 - 10,000, CNY 59,000 - 99,000, HK$ 72,000 - 120,000
 
Provenance: Mr and Mrs D.Saunders
Christie's London, 6 April 1998, lot 34
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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Two blue and white barrel-shaped bowls and covers. Kangxi.
 
Each with gently rounded sides relief-moulded with a row of small pearls, below two panels depicting figures on terraces enjoying various leisure activities divided by small gilt elephant-head handles, the cover with moulded pearls beneath a Buddhistic lion finial, one lion with moving separately attached eyes.
24.5cm (9 5/8in) and 23cm (9in) high. (4). Estimate: £6,000 - 10,000, CNY 59,000 - 99,000, HK$ 72,000 - 120,000
 
Provenance: Christie's London, 7 November 1994, lot 8
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A pair of blue and white bowls. Chenghua six-character marks, Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Each thinly potted, one delicately painted with a scene of a lady with two attendants stepping outside to greet an official divided by rocks from a lady and official in a garden, the interior central medallion with a scholar relaxing beneath a pine; the other painted with ladies meeting a messenger in a garden divided by rocks from a general gesticulating at three men on a high terrace, the interior similarly decorated with a relaxing scholar. 16cm (6 3/8in) diam. (2). Estimate: £4,000 - 7,000, CNY 40,000 - 69,000, HK$ 48,000 - 85,000
 
Provenance: Christie's Amsterdam, 18 May 1994, lot 65
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white square jar and a cover. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
The straight sides painted in blues of varying tone with panels depicting a dancing lady, a lady and attendants on horseback approaching a standing figure, a messenger kneeling on a rug before a lady and a general with soldiers and servants proffering a cup, each within a simple cross-hatched border. 33cm (13in) high (2). Estimate: £4,000 - 7,000, CNY 40,000 - 69,000, HK$ 48,000 - 85,000
 
Provenance: Christie's London, 13 May 1996, lot 68
The Inder Rieden Collection

See the similar jar and cover illustrated by D.F.Lunsingh Scheurleer, Chinese Export Porcelain - Chine de Commande, London, 1974, p.218, no.150
 
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A blue and white 'dragon' bowl. Chenghua six-character mark, Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
The exterior painted with three dragons in mutual pursuit amid scrolling lotus, the interior with a central cruciform motif and ribbons. 15.5cm (6¼in) diam. Estimate: £4,000 - 6,000, CNY 40,000 - 59,000, HK$ 48,000 - 72,000
 
Provenance: according to the owner, purchased from Hooykaas, The Hague
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white bowl. Kangxi six-character mark and of the period. Photo Bonhams
 
With deeply rounded sides rising from a high foot to an everted rim, delicately painted on the exterior with four cartouches of courting couples in gardens and domestic settings, the interior with three boys at play. 20cm (7 7/8in) diam. Estimate: £4,000 - 6,000, CNY 40,000 - 59,000, HK$ 48,000 - 72,000
 
Provenance: The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white bombé bowl. Kangxi.
 
Thickly potted with bulbous sides rising from a sturdy foot to a waisted neck and flaring rim, the exterior painted with a continuous scene of the eight Daoist Immortals with their attributes in a rocky landscape, below five of the Daoist Treasures alternating with stylised scrolls at the rim, wood cover. 23cm (9in) diam (2). Estimate: £4,000 - 6,000, CNY 40,000 - 59,000, HK$ 48,000 - 72,000
 
Provenance: Sotheby's Amsterdam, 22 May 2001, lot 53
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A pair of blue and white pear-shaped vases. Kangxi.
 
Brightly painted on the body with two rows of petal-shaped panels filled with flowering plants beneath a border of stiff lappets, the neck with a bulbous section below a border of lappets. 21.2cm high (2). Estimate: £4,000 - 6,000, CNY 40,000 - 59,000, HK$  8,000 - 72,000
 
Provenance: The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A pair of blue and white pear-shaped vases. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Each with a pear-shaped globular body rising to a horizontal flange beneath the cupped mouth, one decorated with parents and two children playing in a garden, and the other with figures, a sedan chair and horse in a landscape beside an inscription, all beneath stiff pendent plantain leaves at the neck and simple flowers at the mouth. Each 18.5cm (7½in) high (2). Estimate: £4,000 - 6,000, CNY 40,000 - 59,000, HK$ 48,000 - 72,000
 
Provenance: Sotheby's London, 8 November 2006, lot 469
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white slender baluster vase. Xuande six-character mark, Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Painted with a continuous scene of two servants presenting dishes to a dignitary accompanied by another attendant and a deer in a garden of rocks and trees. 22cm (8¾in) high - Estimate: £3,000 - 5,000, CNY 30,000 - 49,000, HK$ 36,000 - 60,000
 
Provenance: Christie's Amsterdam, 19 October 1999, lot 61
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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Two blue and white globular ewers. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Each painted on the globular body with lobed floral medallions, between floral lappet bands around the foot and shoulder, the long tapering neck with similar medallions, the S-shaped handle formed as a dragon biting a horizontal flange below the narrow mouth. Each approximately 25cm (9¾in) high (2). Estimate: £3,000 - 5,000, CNY 30,000 - 49,000, HK$ 36,000 - 60,000
 
Provenance: Christie's London, 1 December 1997, lot 347
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white jar and a cover. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
The globular body brightly painted with a dignitary riding a qilin accompanied by dancing boys, and boys at play, each enclosed within a large lobed panel between lanca characters, the domed cover with three boys at play. 23.5cm (9¼in) high (2). Estimate: £2,000 - 3,000, CNY 20,000 - 30,000, HK$ 24,000 - 36,000
 
Provenance: according to the owner, purchased from Glerum Den Haag, Amsterdam, 22 November 1994, lot 536
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white dish. Kangxi six-character mark and of the period. Photo Bonhams
 
Delicately painted to the interior with a scholar spying on two elegant ladies in a garden, the exterior with small landscape scenes and a lone fishermen. 26.8cm (10½in) diam. Estimate: £2,000 - 3,000, CNY 20,000 - 30,000, HK$ 24,000 - 36,000
 
Provenance: The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white 'ladies' dish. Kangxi six-character mark and of the period. Photo Bonhams
 
Centrally painted with a scene of two ladies conversing in a garden flanked by two attendants holding aloft a fan and a canopy with a fishbowl in the foreground, the rim divided into shaped panels enclosing scenes of ladies at leisure alternating with floral sprays, and a single panel with a bowing elephant. 40.5cm (16in) diam. Estimate: £3,000 - 5,000, CNY 30,000 - 49,000, HK$ 36,000 - 60,000
 
Provenance: Christie's London, 7 November 1994, lot 28
The Inder Rieden collection
 
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A pair of blue and white fluted dishes. Chenghua six-character marks, Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Each interior painted with a scene of hunting on horseback in the central roundel encircled by lotus blooms on interlocking stems surrounding the Eight Buddhist Emblems, bajixiang, the exterior with a single flower stalk evenly spaced within each moulded flute. 19.5 (7¾in) diam. (2). Estimate: £2,000 - 3,000, CNY 20,000 - 30,000, HK$ 24,000 - 36,000
 
Provenance: according to the owner, purchased from Glerum Den Haag, Amsterdam,
17 December 2007, lot 273
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white octagonal facetted cup. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Each side painted with a panel containing a single stem of blossoms and leaves, the interior with a single flower in the well, the shape copying a European silver or glass original. 12cm (4¾in) high - Estimate: £1,500 - 2,500, CNY 15,000 - 25,000, HK$ 18,000 - 30,000.
 
Provenance: according to the owner, purchased from Glerum Den Haag, Amsterdam, 27 March 2001, lot 112
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A pair of blue and white hexagonal salts. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
Each with six lobed panels of floral sprays on the waisted hexagonal foot rising to a rounded lip with small decorative flowers and ribboned musical stones, the central well with blossoming branches. 8cm (3¾in) diam. (2).Estimate: £1,500 - 2,000, CNY 15,000 - 20,000, HK$ 18,000 - 24,000
 
Provenance: Christie's Amsterdam, 19 May 2004, lot 231
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A blue and white globular jar. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
The rounded sides with four lobed panels with flowering branches issuing from rockwork and hovering birds reserved on a ground of stylised flower heads, all above a single moulded rib, wood cover. 25cm (10¾in) high (2). Estimate: £1,000 - 1,500, CNY 9,900 - 15,000, HK$ 12,000 - 18,000
 
Provenance: according to the owner, purchased from Glerum Den Haag, Amsterdam, 17 December 2007, lot 262
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
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A large blue and white dish. Kangxi. Photo Bonhams
 
The central medallion with a shield-shaped panel containing a lady and boy relaxing in a garden all surmounted by a coronet, the border with lobed panels of lotus and scrolling foliage and the flat everted rim with four peacocks alternating with panels of lotus.42cm (16½in) diam. Estimate: £1,000 - 1,500, CNY 9,900 - 15,000, HK$ 12,000 - 18,000
 
Provenance: Sotheby's London, 17 June 1998, lot 406
The Inder Rieden Collection
 
The Inder Rieden Collection. Taste in Transition
 
It is a well-established convention, when scholars discuss the various taste for collecting Chinese ceramics in Europe, that they make a clear distinction between the taste for buying 'new' Export porcelain in the 17th-early 19th century; and the collecting taste fuelled by new (Western) scholarship which emerged from about 1900. This is too broad brush a distinction, because it overlooks one of the most fascinating cultural developments in England during the 19th century. This involved the reassessment of Chinese porcelain existing in Europe, from being essentially a utilitarian and decorative commodity bought initially as 'new' porcelain in the 17th and 18th centuries, into being identified as antique artifacts which initially represented a new English cultural aesthetic, and latterly squarely as examples of Chinese connoisseurship.

The Inder Rieden Collection represents this interesting shift in taste very clearly. In its early stages, the Collection belies its origin in traditional Dutch taste for attractive, fine-quality Kangxi blue and white porcelain, of the type imported by the VOC, but morphed two centuries later by master brand-manipulators like Sir Joseph Duveen into examples of classic Chinese ceramic production. Latterly, the collector's taste moved from a response to the decorative qualities of this fine Export porcelain, into a closer appreciation of the designs, quality of the painting and aesthetic interest of the 'pots'; and hence, almost inevitable, into an enhanced taste for the enamelled 'mark and period' porcelain of Qing Dynasty China, made for domestic Court and upper-class-secular use. This evolved into the ultimate shift towards monochrome ceramics, where no enamelled or underglaze-painted decoration is permitted to distract from the simplicity of a single-coloured vessel of elegant form. The Collection has been well selected over three decades to contain examples of all these four types of traditional Chinese ceramics.

The small but choice selection of late 17th and early 18th century blue and white ware represent all that is best about this fine period of porcelain production in Jingdezhen. The kilns were recovering from serious destruction in the 1650s, and revived demand from both domestic consumers and a leisurely-expanding demand from outside China became increasingly focussed during the Kangxi period on the South-Eastern coastal port of Canton, the walled provincial capital at the head of the Pearl River, 13 miles upstream from the deep water moorings for East India merchant ships in Whampoa Anchorage. The shapes of the vessels in the Inder Rieden Collection reveal that some were made for Chinese usage, some for export.

The cylindrical brush pot is a fine classic example of this simple but relatively new innovation; a vessel which could provide intellectual stimulation and meditational value to a scholar, using it to hold his calligraphy and painting brushes (with, of course, the bristles upright to dry). The brush pot is the clearest Kangxi period example of the most important ceramic development during the 'High Transitional' and Shunzhi periods (circa 1630-1662): the creation of very simple rounded porcelain vessels, whose contours (uncluttered by handles or sharp angles) were largely determined by a potter's wish to reproduce a carefully-structured flat woodblock print onto the rounded surface of a tubular vase or a cylindrical straight-sided brush holder. Nothing in the Chinese ceramics tradition really anticipated this remarkable development in the very last years of the Ming Dynasty, when porcelain vessels became essentially a handscroll which would be 'unrolled' (by rotating) to follow the progress of a narrative print, capturing by very careful reproduction the balance and often elaborate detail of the original woodblock. The Inder Rieden Collection contains a number of display vases which well display this pleasure in copying, often all around the body, a continuous scene which illustrated a well-known moment from a classical romance or an episode of Chinese mythology.

Such vases clearly did come to Europe in the decades around AD1700; many have survived in the West, sometimes even in the original collections for which they were purchased from the wholesale auctions or elegant retail shops in London's Jermyn Street, Amsterdam's Spiegelstraat, or the other colourful 'Chinatrade' shops in a Europe increasingly drawn to Asia's 'luxury products', notably the principal money-spinner, roasted and green teas. But there was a very remarkable change in mid 19th century England, in the way these fine display pieces were appreciated by buyers. For many decades they had been conventional accessories in our English country house drawing rooms; rooms which in the absence of a disaster or a new fashionable owner, could retain their principal furniture and decorations largely untouched for a century or more. In mid 19th century London especially, a group of artists began to rebel against the utilitarian, functional characteristics of 'Industrial art'. Unashamedly seeking for higher aesthetic qualities in the arts around them, and which they sought to create, they generated an intellectually-driven 'Aesthetic Movement' which had, as one of its unlikely side effects, the creation of an almost obsessive appreciation of 'Nankin blue and white', as Kangxi wares were often entitled. Not surprisingly, some of London's most cutting-edge artists formed collections; Whistler's dressed his studio beside Battersea Bridge, and often appeared in his paintings; Oscar Wilde's interest makes an appearance in 'The Portrait of Dorian Gray'; Dante Gabriel Rossetti formed a fine enough collection to be purchased, and handsomely resold, by the Dutch-Jewish dealer Joel Duveen from his shop initially in Hull, and later more grandly in Bond Street. The Duveen family, Frank Partridge and Murray Marks were to transform and old-fashioned Dutch taste for 'blue and white' into avant-garde fashion, parodied by many commentators, but remorselessly endorsed by a generation of late Victorian successful industrialists who were persuaded that the Holy Grail of Chinese porcelain was a Kangxi blue and white 'ginger' (sic) jar painted with prunus blossom on a cracked-ice ground; the iconic 'hawthorn' vase.

The recent exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London puts this rechanneled interest in Chinese blue and white into a wider context. It came at the same time as International Trade Exhibitions were bringing fine modern artifacts from foreign nations to massive European and American audiences; and it marked a more scholarly interest in traditional Chinese and Japanese domestic-taste wares, with exceptional scholars like Fenellosa and Fry opening up vast vistas of unknown Asian cultures. Such an increasing awareness was bound to spur Western collectors into buying more widely. But it took the implosion of Imperial Court life in Beijing to permit much greater access in the West to acquiring such non-export ceramics. This duly happened in the early years of the 20th century, as great London galleries like Sparks and Bluetts, received larger and larger shipments directly from China, some of them consigned by buying staff now resident full time in China. The Imperial ceramics now which represent such a desirable and valuable core of the Inder Rieden Collection reflect these evolving European tastes towards the finest Chinese porcelains, which were such a remarkable feature of the art market in London and Paris almost a century ago.
 
 Bonhams. The Inder Rieden Collection of Fine Chinese Porcelain. New Bond Street, 10 Nov 2011 www.bonhams.com
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