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1 juin 2019

A Junyao moon-white glazed narcissus bowl, Song–Ming dynasty

A Junyao moon-white glazed narcissus bowl, Song–Ming dynasty

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Lot 335. A Junyao moon-white glazed narcissus bowl, Song–Ming dynasty; 23.5 cm, 9 1/4  in. Estimate 1,800,000 — 2,500,000 HKD. Lot sold 2,250,000 HKD. © Sotheby's.

with shallow rounded sides curving down to a flat recessed base supported on three gently flaring ruyi-shaped feet, the rim bordered with a band enclosing evenly spaced rounded studs between two narrow raised ribs, above a further band of studs above the feet, applied overall with an even milky lavender-blue glaze with characteristic worm-tracks and thinning to a mushroom tone at the raised edges, the feet and base covered with a wash of pale mushroom glaze, the interior of one foot incised with a character san (three), surrounded by near circular spur marks revealing the pale buff stoneware body.

Property from the Xinyangtang Collection.

Provenance: Collection of the Idemitsu Museum of Arts, Tokyo.

LiteratureSelected Masterpieces From The Idemitsu Collection, Idemistu Museum of Arts, Tokyo, 1986, vol. 1, pl. 118.

NoteThis narcissus bowl radiates the essence of Jun ware which derived its beauty from their robust forms which were coated in a contrasting luminous thick glaze of varied moon-white colouration that becomes almost transparent around the edges of the vessel where the glaze thins significantly. On the present bowl the glossy glaze is reminiscent of a hazy blue sky, infused with the characteristic markings that have become known as 'earthworm tracks'.

Highly prized throughout Chinese dynastic history since their production, these striking vessels were produced in a variety of proportions and glaze colours and are found in some of the most important museums and private collections of Chinese art. Bowls of this type also incised with the character san (three), include two deep-lavender glazed examples, in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, published in A Panorama of Ceramics in the Collection of the National Palace Museum: Chun Ware, Taipei, 1999, pls 32 and 33, together with further examples inscribed with different numbers, pls 27-31 and 34-36; and another, from the collection of Captain Vivian Bulkeley-Johnson, The Mount Trust, sold twice at Christie’s Hong Kong in 1991 and 1996, again in our London rooms in 2003, and a fourth time in our New York rooms, 23rd March 2011, lot 514.

Further bowls of this type, in the Palace Museum, Beijing, are illustrated in Selection of Jun Ware. The Palace Museum's Collection and Archaeological Excavation, Beijing, 2013, pls 94-96, 113, 115 and 116, together with fragments excavated from the kiln site, pls 97-98 and one excavated in Yuzhou city (pl. 114 and p. 343, figs 12-1 and 12-2); and another, incised with the numeral si (four) from the Dr W. Kilgenberg and Reach Family collections, included in the exhibition Chinese Art from the Reach Family Collection, Eskenazi, London, 1989, cat. no. 24, sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 28th April 1997, lot 696, again in these rooms, 2nd May 2000, lot 590, and a third time in our London rooms, 11th November 2015, lot 81. And a third bowl, also incised with the numeral si (four), from the Tianminlou collection, sold in these rooms, 3rd April 2019, lot 1. See also a blue-glazed bowl from the T.Y. Chao collection, sold in our Hong Kong rooms, 19th May 1987, lot 210.

The form of this bowl, also known as ‘drum nail’ basins, belongs to a distinct group of flower receptacles known as ‘numbered Jun’ wares, mostly made in moulds and generally inscribed on the base with numerals from one to ten that seem to correspond to the size of the vessels. The dating of these wares has been long debated and continues to divide opinions between a Northern Song (960-1127), late Yuan (1279-1368) and early Ming (1368-1644) attribution.

The Northern Song date, adhered to by many eminent Chinese scholars, was supported by a surface find near the kiln sites of a mould fragment for coins bearing the Xuanhe reign name (1119-1125), made of Jun ware clay. However, at scholarly conferences on the subject in Yuzhou in 2005 and in Shenzhen in 2006 the date of the coin mould itself has come under scrutiny and was basically discredited, since it was shown not to be a mould for actual coins of that period and to bear a spurious reign mark of an even earlier period on the reverse. Scientific tests of sherds undertaken by the Shanghai Museum have pointed to a late Yuan or early Ming date. A newly discovered Jun ewer very similar in shape to a gold ewer from the tomb of King Zhuang of Liang, buried in 1441, has also been offered as evidence for a later dating.

Since a large body of 'numbered Jun' wares remains in the Chinese imperial collection both in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, and the Palace Museum, Beijing, often inscribed after firing with the names of Palace halls, a Yuan date seems less likely, as virtually no Yuan ceramics formed part of the Qing court collection. The production of these flower vessels fits better into the early Ming dynasty, and they may well have been officially commissioned for the newly built imperial palace in Beijing in the Yongle period (1403-1424). Furthermore, these vessels do not appear in any pre-Ming text or painting, and their form is similar to early Ming celadon-glazed flower vessels, such as one included in the exhibition Xuande Imperial Porcelain Excavated at Jingdezhen, Chang Foundation, Taipei, 1998, cat. no. 39
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Sotheby's. Chinese Art, Hong Kong, 30 May 2019

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