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28 février 2015

A large 'Jun' mallow-shaped dish, Song dynasty (960-1279)

A large 'Jun' mallow-shaped dish, Song dynasty (960-1279)

Lot 84. A large 'Jun' mallow-shaped dish, Song dynasty (960-1279). Diameter 10 1/4  in., 26 cmEstimate 60,000 — 80,000 USD. Lot sold 106,250 USD. Photo Sotheby's. 

the shallow rounded sides indented to form ten-petaled lobes, covered allover with an opaque pale blue glaze thinning to mushroom on the ribs and the rim, the base with five spur marks revealing the gray body. 

NoteThis dish is an outstandingly fine and rare example of Jun ware for its large size and delicate shape which is covered in a fine pale blue glaze. With its thin carefully potted body and luminous translucent glaze, which required spurs for firing, it better resembles the fine imperial Ru and 'guan' wares than the more common heavily-potted and glazed wares in the Jun kilns. Notably there are more extant examples of Ru ware than Jun vessels of this type which suggests that it is a particularly exceptional example of Jun, perhaps made in direct emulation or in competition with Ru.

A dish of closely related form, but of smaller size, from the collections of Lord Cunliffe and Prof and Mrs. P.H. Plesch, was sold in our London rooms, 12th July 2006, lot 39. Compare dishes of this type but with varying numbers of petals, such as a smaller eight-lobed example, in the Palace Museum, Beijing,  illustrated in Selection of Jun Ware. The Palace Museum’s Collection and Archaeological Excavation, Beijing, 2013, pl. 13; and another with eight petals, from the Sir Percival David collection and now in the British Museum, London, published in Illustrated Catalogue of Ru, Guan, Jun, Guangdong and Yixing Wares in the Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art, London, 1999, no. A4, col. pl. 35, together with another, no. A5; slightly smaller six-lobed dish, included in the exhibition Song. Chinese Ceramics 10th to 13th Century (pt. 3), Eskenazi, New York, 2007, cat. no. 3; and a five-lobed dish of similar size, from the Eumorfopoulos collection, shown in the International Exhibition of Chinese Art, Royal Academy of Art, London, 1935, cat. no. 1093, and sold in our London rooms, 29th May 1940, lot 178.

Sotheby's. Song Tradition: Early Ceramics from the Yang De Tang Collection. New York, 17 march 2015, 11:00 AM

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