A rare cinnabar lacquer tray with figures, Ming Dynasty, 16th century
A rare cinnabar lacquer tray with figures, Ming Dynasty, 16th century. photo Sotheby's
the square quatrilobed tray with rounded sides deeply carved with two finely detailed scene of figures in a landscape, the scene diagonally divided in two by a mountain range, the foreground depicting a scholar travelling on horseback followed by his entourage of servants crossing over a bridge about to enter through a small gate, the sign above the gate reading Changsha Fu, the background depicting a three-storied pavilion with scholars gathered on the balcony and on the ground floor, with a bridge leading to a large fortified city gate, the sign above the gate reading Jiang Cheng, the landscape densely filled with mountains and pine trees, the land and water represented by different diapers carved through to the yellow ochre ground, the exterior carved with peonies and lychees reserved on a yellow diaper ground, all on a low foot skirted with a key-fret band, the underside lacquered in black densely crackled with age - 18.2 cm., 7 1/8 in. ESTIMATION 1,200,000-1,500,000 HKD. Lot 3147 unsold.
NOTE DE CATALOGUE: In its form the present finely carved tray appears to be inspired by earlier, Song dynasty, wares such as the plain black-lacquer tray in the collection of the Nezu Institute of Art in Tokyo illustrated in The Monochrome Principle, Munster, 2008, pl. 1. See also a foliated square tray with floral carved decoration, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, illustrated in James C. Y. Watt and Barbara Brennan Ford, East Asian Lacquer. The Florence and Herbert Irving Collection, New York, 1991, p. 90, pl. 31, where the authors note that this type of vessel is representative of a class of carved lacquer of the mid-Ming period. Another closely related piece carved with the 'three friends' motif, in the Seattle Art Museum, is illustrated in Sir Harry Garner, Chinese Lacquer, London, 1979, pl. 73, where it is attributed to the sixteenth century. Further compare a square tray with similar exaggerated scalloped corners, carved with the design of figures and pavilions in a landscape setting, published in Lee Yu-Kuan, Oriental Lacquer Art, New York and
Tokyo, 1972, pl. 120.
Unusually, the figural scene covers the entire surface without the usual border band decoration. More frequent are square trays with a central figural landscape motif within a border of foliate scroll decoration such as the piece in the Palace Museum, Beijing, included in Zhongguo qiqi quanji, vol. 5, 1995, Fuzhou, pl. 23, together with a slightly smaller tray, also from the Imperial court collection and still in Beijing, pl. 50. See also a tray sold at Christie's London, 9th June 1975, lot 119, carved with a mountainous river landscape within a border of confronting dragons
Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art. Hong Kong | 04 avr. 2012 www.sothebys.com