A rare Longquan Guan-type shallow dish, Song-Yuan dynasty, 13th-14th century
Lot 1354. A rare Longquan Guan-type shallow dish, Song-Yuan dynasty, 13th-14th century; 9¼ in. (23.5 cm.) diam. Estimate USD 15,000 - USD 20,000. Price realised USD 15,000. © Christie's Image Ltd 2010.
Of shallow form, carved around the exterior with a band of petals, above the low foot rim, covered all over and on the base with an icy, crackle-suffused glaze of blue-green color.
Exhibited: On loan to the Portland Art Museum, 1 June 2006 - 22 June 2010.
Note: It is possible that the fine, icy crackle in the glaze of this lovely dish was a deliberate attempt to imitate Guan wares, as a number of Song dynasty vessels from the Longquan kilns were made in the style of Guan wares. Some of these were made with a dark colored body, while others had a pale body similar to that seen of the present dish. This dish is not only distinguished by its beautiful glaze, but also by its relatively large size, with most dishes of this type, carved with a band of petals on the exterior and undecorated on the interior, being generally of smaller size, ranging typically from approximately 13.7 cm. to 16.3 cm. in diameter. A dish of the same size as the current example and carved with petals on the exterior, but with an even, uncrackled glaze, excavated at Jianyang City, Sichuan province, and now in the Sichuan Museum, is illustrated by Zhu Boqian, Celadons from Longquan Kilns, Taipei, 1998, p. 169, no. 140. Smaller Longquan dishes of this type include one discovered in 1963 amongst a cache of celadon, black-glazed and other ceramic wares in a Song dynasty well near Majiaqiao, Shaoxing in Zhejiang province. See 'Zhejiang Shaoxing Majiaqiao Song qu fa qu jianbao', Kaogu, 1964:11, p. 558, fig. 11:5. Other examples of this smaller type were more recently unearthed in Zhejiang, and are illustrated in Newly Discovered Southern Song Ceramics, A Thirteenth-Century "Time Capsule", Tokyo, 1998, nos. 46-8.
Christie's. Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art, New York, 16 - 17 September 2010