A rare Qingbai 'phoenix' ewer and cover, Yuan dynasty
Lot 230. A rare Qingbai 'phoenix' ewer and cover, Yuan dynasty. Estimate 4,000 — 6,000 GBP (5,108 - 7,663 EUR). Photo Sotheby's
the pear-shaped body rising from a short spreading foot to a flaring neck with rolled rim, set to one side with a dragon loop handle and to the other with a delicately curved spout issuing from the mouth of a dragon and supported by an S-shaped strut, slip decorated around the body with bands of lotus lappets, phoenix in flight, flowers and chevrons and covered overall in a pale soft greyish-blue glaze, the domed cover surmounted by seated lion; 28 cm, 11 in.
Note: Qingbai ewers of this type, applied on the body with a flying phoenix, reflect the quest for richer ornamentation in the second half of the Yuan dynasty. A similar ewer and cover, from the Art Institute, Chicago, is illustrated in Margaret Medley, Yuan Porcelain and Stoneware, London, 1974, pl. 10; another is published in Sekai toji zenshu/ Ceramic Art of the World, vol. 13, Tokyo, 1981, pl. 42; and a larger ewer, from the Mr and Mrs Otto Doering and the Meiyintang collections, illustrated in Regina Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, vol. 4, London, 2010, pl. 1610, was sold at Christie’s New York, 9th November 1978, lot 125, and again our Hong Kong rooms, 7th April 2011, lot 39.
Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, Londres, 11 mai 2016, 10:00 AM