Christie's. For Imperial Appreciation: Fine Chinese Ceramics from the Greenwald Collection, 1 December 2010, Hong Kong
A very rare Ming white-glazed lobed brushwasher, Zhengde four-character mark within double-circles and of the period
Lot 2807. A very rare Ming white-glazed lobed brushwasher, Zhengde four-character mark within double-circles and of the period (1506-1521); 7 5/8 in. (19.3 cm.) diam. Estimate HKD 1,500,000 - HKD 2,000,000. Price realised HKD 1,940,000. © Christie's Images Ltd 2010
Exquisitely potted with shallow gently flaring sides divided into ten vertical petal-shaped lobes rising from the foliate foot to the wavy rim, surrounding the flat base, covered entirely with a smooth milky-white glaze with a faint bluish tinge.
Provenance: Previously sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 30 October 2001, lot 612
Greenwald Collection, no. 80
Note: This floral shape originates in the early 15th century; an unmarked tianbai, 'sweet-white' glazed, ten-lobed brushwasher excavated from the Yongle stratum, was included in the exhibition, Imperial Hongwu and Yongle Porcelain excavated at Jingdezhen, Chang Foundation, Taipei, 1998, see the Catalogue, p. 262, no. 100. During the early Ming period, brushwashers of this form are also found decorated in underglaze-blue, such as the 'dragon and phoenix' brushwasher sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 1 November 2004, lot 860, dated to the Yongle period. Compare also Xuande-marked blue and white examples, in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, decorated with dragon and phoenix roundels, illustrated in Blue-and-White Ware of the Ming Dynasty, Book II, Part I, Hong Kong 1963, pl. 23; and one in the Percival David Foundation, now housed at the British Museum, illustrated in Oriental Ceramics, The World's Great Collections, Kodansha Series, 1982, vol. 6, no. 94, designed with a single dragon on the interior.
Bowl with flared lobed sides, Ming dynasty, Zhengde mark and period, 1506-1521, Jingdezhen, Jiangxi province. Porcelain with underglaze cobalt-blue mark and transparent glaze, Sir Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art, PDF,A.436 © 2017 Trustees of the British Museum
The present brushwasher continued the tradition of the early Ming and was commissioned among a group of similar scholar's objects that were made for the Ming court. Compare with Zhengde-marked white-glazed brushwashers of the same shape, cf. two in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, the first included in the Illustrated Catalogue of Ming Dynasty Porcelain, pl. 104, and the second illustrated in Monochrome Ware of the Ming Dynasty, Book II, pl. 1; one in the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, Stockholm, illustrated by J. Wirgin, Chinese Ceramics from the Axel and Nora Lundgren Bequest, pl. 40a, no. 44; the washer previously from the Eumorfopoulos, Cunliffe and T. Y. Chao Collections, sold most recently at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 19 May 1987, lot 251; and another from the Ira and Nancy Koger Collection, sold at Sotheby's New York, 27 November 1990, lot 8.
It is interesting to compare the present lot with a dish of this form which is illustrated in the sixth Guwan tu or 'Scroll of Antiquities', dated to the sixth year of the Yongzheng reign (1728). The scroll, which is an illustration of antiquities collected at the imperial palace during the early Qing period, was given by the Empress Dowager to Colonel A. H. Moorhead, I. M. S. The scroll was later sold at Sotheby's London, 19 May 1939, lot 62, and subsequently donated by Lady David to the Percival David Foundation.
Anonymous artists of the Qing imperial painting academy, Guwan tu ‘Pictures of Ancient Playthings’, detail, Qing dynasty, Yongzheng period, dated equivalent to AD 1728. Ink and colours on paper. Lady David gave this scroll to the Percival David Foundation in 1985. Sir Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art, PDF,X.01 © 2017 Trustees of the British Museum.