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24 avril 2017

An incised white porcelain paper-roll holder, Joseon Dynasty, 19th century

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Lot 109. An incised white porcelain paper-roll holder, Joseon Dynasty, 19th century; 4 ¼ in. (10.8 cm.) high. Estimate USD 70,000 - USD 90,000. © Christie's Images Ltd 2017

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Modeled in octagonal faceted form with flared rim, finely incised with deer, crane and rocks, applied with a transparent glaze, recessed base glazed, foot rim unglazedWith a wood box affixed with exhibition label (impage, left)) titled richo hakuji inkoku fukabachi (Joseon Dynasty incised white porcelain deep bowl), and an exhibition caption. 

LiteratureNakamura Keiichi, ed., Chosen kogei tenrankai zuroku (Catalogue of exhibitions of Korean art and craft), vol. 3, reprinted edition (Tokyo: Toyo Keizai Nipposha, 1984), no. 1757.

ExhibitedTakashimaya Departmentstore, Osaka, Chosen kogei tenrankai (Exhibition of Korean works of art), 1939.11.15-20

NoteLikely for holding scrolls on the scholar’s desk, or possibly to hold the scholar’s brushes, this exceptionally refined vessel perfectly embodies the Korean taste for subtly decorated porcelains. Having adopted Neo-Confucianism as the state philosophy during the Joseon dynasty (1392–1910), Koreans, and particularly the literati, espoused an austere aesthetic vision that led them to prefer porcelain vessels with only limited decoration for the scholar’s desk. Although many porcelains for the Korean scholar’s studio exhibit designs painted in underglaze cobalt blue, the most exalted ones, like this rare vessel, display lightly incised decoration or remain wholly undecorated, relying on tautness of form and perfection of color for their aesthetic appeal. Korean clients of the nineteenth century found faceted vessels especially appealing, the facets typically eight in number. This vessel’s spotted white deer and Manchurian crane stood as favored symbols of longevity in traditional Korea, visual rebuses that offer the viewer the wish for long life.

Christie'sAn Inquiring Mind: American Collecting of Japanese & Korean Art, 25 April 2017, New York, Rockefeller Center

 

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