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A blue and white 'dragon' dish, Kangxi period

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A blue and white 'dragon' dish, Kangxi period

A blue and white 'dragon' dish, Kangxi period. Estimate £600 - 800 (€820 - 1,100). Photo Bonhams

Boldly painted with two five-clawed dragons vying for a pearl amongst flaming clouds on a swirling wave background, the exterior with beribboned lozenges and leaves, the base with a channelled foot rim and a lozenge mark. 35.4cm (13 7/8in) diam.

Provenance: A private collection, acquired in Singapore in the 1930s, and thence by descent.

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE


National Gallery of Art announces major acquisition of Jacob Ochtervelt painting

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Jacob Ochtervelt, A Nurse and a Child in the Foyer of an Elegant Townhouse, 1663. Oil on canvas, 32 x 26 1/4 in. (81.5 x 66.8 cm). National Gallery of Art, Washington. The Lee and Juliet Folger Fund.

WASHINGTON, DC.- The National Gallery of Art has acquired a masterpiece by the Dutch genre painter Jacob Ochtervelt (1634–1682). Arguably Ochtervelt's finest painting, A Nurse and a Child in the Foyer of an Elegant Townhouse, signed and dated 1663, is currently on view in Gallery 50 of the West Building, Main Floor. The acquisition of A Nurse and a Child in the Foyer of an Elegant Townhouse is made possible by the generous support of The Lee and Juliet Folger Fund. 

"This wonderful painting complements one of the great strengths of the Gallery's collection: the Dutch painters of high-life genre scenes in the 1650s and 1660s, among them Johannes Vermeer, Pieter de Hooch, Gerard ter Borch, and Gabriel Metsu. Each of these artists capture quiet moments of daily life that entrance and engage viewers, not only because of the sensitivity of their depictions of the human figure but also because of the way they capture the effects of light and color, and the sheen of fabrics," said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art, Washington. 

A Nurse and a Child in the Foyer of an Elegant Townhouse depicts a well-dressed young boy—not yet breeched—wearing a freshly ironed white dress decorated with blue and yellow ribbons and a gold medal on a chain drops a silver coin into the hat of a young beggar. Ochtervelt situated his scene at the threshold of a sumptuous home, whose foyer is distinguished by high ceilings, marble floors, and Italianate paintings hanging on the wall. The wealthy young boy, probably about five years old, holds the hand of his nurse, while the parents, visible through an open doorway, proudly observe the boy's charity—a virtue taught in the home and of great importance to the Dutch—from their parlor. Ochtervelt distinguishes the different classes through a sensitive rendering of clothing, complexion, and body language. A bristling spaniel stands at alert as this unknown young beggar tentatively enters into the family's space, adding a dramatic flair to the interior scene. 

A native of Rotterdam, Jacob Ochtervelt studied painting in Haarlem from 1645 to 1650 with the landscape painter Nicolaes Berchem and returned to Rotterdam around 1655. After a successful career in that great port city, in 1667, he moved to Amsterdam, where he spent the rest of his life. Ochtervelt focused on the pleasures of patrician life and leisure—men and women reading and writing letters, eating and drinking, making music, and playing games. However, his most innovative scenes are those that depict the interactions between the upper and lower classes, often placed at the threshold of an elegant townhouse. Characterized by clarity of light and of color, his paintings display a sympathetic rendering of people from all social classes.

A pair of blue and white dishes, Jiajing six-character marks, Kangxi period

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A pair of blue and white dishes, Jiajing six-character marks, Kangxi period

A pair of blue and white dishes, Jiajing six-character marks, Kangxi period. Estimate £800 - 1,200 (€1,100 - 1,600). Photo Bonhams

Variously painted with scenes of gentlemen seated at leisure on riverbanks, in conversation and playing a game, in mountainous river landscapes, the rims with floral vignettes on hatch pattern grounds, the exteriors with foliate motifs. 26.6cm (10.1/2in) diam. (2).

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE

A blue and white 'lotus' dish, Kangxi period

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A blue and white 'lotus' dish, Kangxi period

A blue and white 'lotus' dish, Kangxi period. Estimate £500 - 800 (€680 - 1,100). Photo Bonhams

The well painted with scrolling lotus flowers, surrounded by another similar band at the flat rim, apocryphal Chenghua six-character mark to the base. 27.3cm (10 3/4in) diam.

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE

A blue and white 'phoenix-tail' vase, yenyen, Kangxi

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A blue and white 'phoenix-tail' vase, yenyen, Kangxi period

A blue and white 'phoenix-tail' vase, yenyen, Kangxi period. Estimate £500 - 800 (€680 - 1,100). Photo Bonhams

Painted and moulded with petal-shaped panels of scrolling, leafy peony and chrysanthemum sprays, fitted for electricity. The vase: 53cm (20 7/8in)

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE

Two Chinese Imari wares, Kangxi period

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Two Chinese Imari wares, Kangxi period

Two Chinese Imari wares, Kangxi periodEstimate £600 - 800 (€820 - 1,100). Photo Bonhams

Comprising: a shell form dish, painted and gilt with a variety of flowering, leafy branches; and a rosewater sprinkler decorated with scrolling leafy stems of peonies and lilies. The sprinkler: 20.5cm (8.1/8in) high (2).

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE

A blue and white 'three friends' dish, Chenghua six-character mark, Kangxi period

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A blue and white 'three friends' dish, Chenghua six-character mark, Kangxi period

A blue and white 'three friends' dish, Chenghua six-character mark, Kangxi periodEstimate £800 - 1,200 (€1,100 - 1,600). Photo Bonhams

Painted with a planter containing blossoming prunus, bamboo and pine beside two smaller jardinieres of flowering plants, the exterior with further branches comprising The Three Friends. 20cm (7.7/8in) diam..

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE

A Dehua figure of a dignitary, 17th century

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A Dehua figure of a dignitary, 17th century

A Dehua figure of a dignitary, 17th centuryEstimate £500 - 700 (€680 - 950). Photo Bonhams

The figure seated on a low throne, wearing voluminous robes, the hands folded on the lap with a single finger protruding, the bearded face with downcast eyes, the head crowned with a flapped hat with tassels. 21cm (8 1/4in) high 

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE

 


A blanc-de-chine figure of Guanyin, 18th century

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A blanc-de-chine figure of Guanyin, 18th century

A blanc-de-chine figure of Guanyin, 18th centuryEstimate £1,000 - 1,500 (€1,400 - 2,000). Photo Bonhams

The Bodhisattva of Mercy seated in royal ease, clad in a long flowing robes that gather about her bare feet, the serene face with downcast eyes, below a coiled chignon and shawl, with tied tresses falling round the shoulders, flanking the pectoral plaque at the chest. 21cm (8 1/4in) high

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE

A pair of blanc-de-chine figures of Guanyin, Kangxi period

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A pair of blanc-de-chine figures of Guanyin, Kangxi period

A pair of blanc-de-chine figures of Guanyin, Kangxi periodEstimate £500 - 700 (€680 - 950). Photo Bonhams

Each modelled as the Bodhisattva of Mercy seated at ease, clad in long robes and with a hood covering the high chignon, the chest with jewels, the left hand holding a scroll, traces of European lacquer embellishment. Each: 18.2cm (7 1/8in) high (2).

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE

A group of seven blanc-de-chine scholars objects, Kangxi period

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A group of seven blanc-de-chine scholars objects, Kangxi period

A group of seven blanc-de-chine scholars objects, Kangxi periodEstimate £1,200 - 1,500 (€1,600 - 2,000). Photo Bonhams

Comprising: A small stem cup with applied prunus decoration; a pair of toad-form water pots; a rectangular joss-stick holder with moulded scrolling motifs, crowned with two Buddhistic lions; a small model of a qilin; a pair of brush holders formed as fishermen reclining on their fish baskets. The joss-stick holder: 9.5cm (3 3/4in) wide (7).

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, 9 Nov 2015 10:30 GMT - LONDON, KNIGHTSBRIDGE

Paintings, sculpture and manuscripts from the Mogao Caves on view at Princeton University Art Museum

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Mogao Caves near Dunhuang, China.

PRINCETON, NJ.- Since their creation over 1,500 years ago, the Mogao Caves, located on the outskirts of the city of Dunhuang in northwestern China, continue to narrate the history of religious art – Buddhist, Daoist and other religions – and connect the Eastern and Western worlds through their once central location at the gateway to the Silk Road. This fall, the caves come to Princeton through a time capsule of objects dating from A.D. 270 to the 1960s. Sacred Caves of the Silk Road: Ways of Knowing and Re-creating Dunhuang explores the aesthetic and transcontinental nature of this World Heritage Site. The exhibition is on view at the Princeton University Art Museumfrom Oct. 3, 2015 through Jan. 10, 2016. 

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Parinirvana, Mogao Cave 158, dated Middle Tang dynasty (781–848). Dunhuang, Gansu province. Photograph taken in 1943–44. The Lo Archive.

The more than 700 surviving Mogao caves are a treasure trove of artistic riches, including 45,000 square meters of wall paintings, 60,000 texts and more than 2,000 painted stucco sculptures. Since their rediscovery in the early 20th century, the caves and their contents have fascinated archaeologists and scholars, and they have been the focus of international efforts to ensure their conservation. Princeton University, in collaboration with the Dunhuang Academy in China, is involved in a multiyear research project on the site. 

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Chinese, Tang dynasty, 618–907, Tejaprabha Buddha and the Five Planets, 897. Ink and color on silk; sheet: 80.4 × 55.4 cm (31 5/8 × 21 13/16 in.); frame: 105 × 75.5 × 3.5 cm (41 5/16 × 29 3/4 × 1 3/8 in.). British Museum, Gift of Sir Marc Aurel Stein (1919,0101,0.31)

Sacred Caves of the Silk Road explores how we come to know Dunhuang through diverse original materials found at the caves, including architecture, paintings, sculpture and manuscripts. How knowledge of these materials is then conveyed – via photography, artist renderings, travelogues, printed publications or digital reproductions – then determines how we are able to understand Dunhuang, including a Dunhuang of the imagination. The exhibition brings together both original and secondary materials to allow for a deeper look into the history of the sacred site, the sociocultural sphere it operated within and the religious life of the region. 

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Chinese, Tang dynasty, 618–907. Examination paper, reused for the upper part of a funeral shoe. Fragment; ink on paper mounted: 49 × 51 cm (19 5/16 × 20 1/16 in.) East Asian Library, Princeton University

The Dunhuang caves represent one of the most multifaceted cultural achievements in the world, the result of centuries of accreted uses and meanings,” notes James Steward, Nancy A. Nasher–David J. Haemisegger Director of the Princeton University Art Museum. “Princeton is proud to play a part in preserving the caves for the future and in disseminating knowledge of these sites for those who can’t directly travel the Silk Road.” 

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Chinese, Song dynasty, 960–1279. Garland of Legends which Pertain to the Ten Courses of Actions (Shiye daowu yu ; Skt.Daśakarmapathāvadānamālā), after 10th century. Pothi-book format; ink and color on paper mounted: 45.5 × 66 cm (17 15/16 × 26 in.). East Asian Library, Princeton University

Original objects in the exhibition come in part from a cache of paintings, banners and scrolls that was hidden within one of the caves. Sealed sometime at the beginning of the 11th century, the cache was discovered by a local monk in the early 20th century. Two loaned paintings from this “Library Cave” that are now in the collection of the British Museum anchor the exhibition. Both date to the Tang dynasty (618–907) and represent the portable images that were produced for Buddhist devotees in the Dunhuang region. One painting, titled Tejaprabha Buddha and the Five Planets and dated 897, is a rare, richly colored depiction of the Buddha of the Blazing Light. The other, Portrait of a Monk, depicts a figure through monochrome ink-line painting. By contrast, three small sculptural fragments now in the Art Museum’s collections represent devotional images that belonged to the architectural program of the Dunhuang caves. 

Also on display are a wealth of texts that present the extraordinary range of written documents to have survived from Dunhuang and the surrounding region, including Buddhist sutras and a third-century edition of the Daode jing, a central text in Daoism. Manuscripts on loan from Princeton’s East Asian Library present another side of the region’s cultural life. Dating from before the 14th century, they include fragments of an almanac and an examination paper, types of everyday written records that rarely survive, as well as texts written in scripts other than Chinese, pointing to Dunhuang’s strategic location as a Silk Road terminus that hosted diverse peoples. 

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This bilingual Tibetan and Chinese manuscript includes letters of introduction for a pilgrimage (British Library IOL Tib J 754). A Chinese monk carried this manuscript on a pilgrimage in the 10th century through Tibetan-held areas of modern Gansu and Qinghai provinces as he made his way from Mount Wutai in China to Buddhist holy places in India. In addition to letters in Tibetan requesting safe passage, the manuscript also contains Chinese legends about various sacred sites in China.   (Photo courtesy of International Dunhuang Project)

Sacred Caves of the Silk Road also draws on an important archive of historic photographs from Dunhuang to frame a context for the objects on display. Beginning in 1943, photographers James and Lucy Lo undertook an eighteen-month-long research project during which they produced a remarkable set of black-and-white negatives of the exteriors and interiors of the Dunhuang caves. The resulting images document the caves at an important point in their history, prior to the conservation and restoration work done in recent decades, and reveal the artistry of the photographers. The exhibit displays a selection of these photographs as well as color renderings of two paintings from a single cave that the Los and their team created to provide a record of the cave’s visual and architectural program. 

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James and Lucy Lo traveled to Dunhuang in 1943 and spent 18 months systematically photographing the exteriors and interiors of the caves. They produced an unparalleled set of black-and-white negatives, remarkable for their documentary value as well as their artistic quality. This photograph shows the site just as the Dunhuang Academy was being founded. The exterior walls of many of the cave temples had collapsed, exposing the cave interiors with their wall paintings and stucco statues to the elements. (View of the Mogao Caves circa 1943–44. Photo © Lo Archive)

Dora C. Y. Ching, associate director of the P. Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art and co-curator of the exhibition, said that“through our research project on the Lo Archive of photographs, we first had a view of what the caves were like in the 1940s, and then we were able to visit Dunhuang and step further back in time as we entered the caves, each time uncovering layer upon layer of complexity and experiencing the richness of Dunhuang – from the artistry of the architecture, the paintings and the sculpture to the sheer physicality of the site.” 

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This photo is of Mogao Cave 17 as it probably looked before texts and paintings were deposited inside and sealed up in the 11th century. This one-room cave-temple was originally designed in the 9th century to memorialize the monk depicted in the statue, Hongbian, who died in the year 862. The son of a prominent family, Hongbian was the area's highest-ranking monastic official. His life-size statue, which originally contained his ashes, sits in meditation. A wall painting behind the statue provides the setting, while his deeds are discussed in the memorial stele on the left. (Photo courtesy of Dunhuang Academy) 

Cary Y. Liu, curator of Asian Art at the Princeton University Art Museum, added that “Sacred Caves of the Silk Road is the culmination of more than five years of collaborative research, and it has allowed us to explore a part of the world that I never imagined I would ever reach. It was like traveling to the far side of the moon.” 

The exhibition has been complemented by two installations: Imaging Dunhuang: Artistic Renderings from the Lo Workshop on view in the Museum’s Works on Paper Study Room, and the photography installation Dunhuang through the Lens of James and Lucy Lo is currently on display in Princeton University’s Department of Art and Archaeology, located in nearby McCormick Hall. 

Sacred Caves of the Silk Road: Ways of Knowing and Re-creating Dunhuang was organized by the Princeton University Art Museum with the P. Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art.

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This topographical map shows some of the linkages between the various empires of the medieval period, including China in the East, the Turkic and Uighur empires in the north, the Tibetan empire on the Himalayan plateau, and the Arab Caliphate in the west. Traders and armies heading west across the Tarim Basin and Taklamakan Desert would stop in Dunhuang (and the nearby Mogao Caves) as the last town under Chinese control. Moving in the other direction, caravans traversing any of the central Asian routes known under the modern term "Silk Road" would have passed through Dunhuang on their way into China. (Map courtesy of International Dunhuang Project) 

Galerie des peintures morales des grottes de Mogao 

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Peinture murale du Xe siècle ornant la grotte 61, et montrant les monastères Tang bouddhistes du mont Wutai, au Shanxi province.

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Gros plan de la peinture murale décrivant l'empereur Han Wudi (156 - 87 avant J.-C.) en train d'adorer deux statues de Bouddha (fresque datant de 700 après J.-C. environ)

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Peinture sur soie de paysage, d'époque Tang, représentant un jeune Sakyamuni en train de couper ses cheveux.

Mural_in_273th_Cave_of_Mogao_Caves

Peinture murale de la grotte 273 ; certaines parties de l'image ont noircies du fait de l'oxydation.

Emperor_Taizong_in_Dunhuang

L'empereur Taizong à Dunhuang, peinture de la grotte 220 (dynastie des Tang)

Vimalakirti_debating_Manjusri,_Tang_Dynasty

Détail d'une peinture de la grotte 103, détail représentant un débat entre Vimalakirti et le boddhisatva Manjusri.

TsangMonk

Peinture du moine Xuanzang faisant une cérémonie pour le Bouddha.

Dunhuang_star_map

Carte de la voute céleste datant de VIIIsiècle après J.Cles constellations de la Grande Oursedu Sagittaire et dCapricorne sont reconnaissables. 

Grand plat Iznik, Turquie, art ottoman, vers 1575

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Grand plat Iznik, Turquie, art ottoman, vers 1575

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Grand plat Iznik, Turquie, art ottoman, vers 1575. Estimation 25,000 — 30,000 €. Photo: Sotheby's

de forme creuse, le marli chantourné, en céramique siliceuse à décor peint en polychromie sur un fond d'engobe blanc, sous une glaçure transparente, orné d'un bouquet composé d'une tulipe, de pivoines, églantines et jacinthes, le marli à motifs de vagues et rochers, bleu et noir, le revers à motifs de rosettes alternant avec des bouquets de tulipes, un oiseau ciselé sur l'aile, probablement la marque d'un potier - diam. 32 cm ; 12 1/2  in

ProvenanceSotheby's Londres, 13 avril 1988, lot 342

BibliographieF. Lehnhoff, Keramik der Islamischen Welt (Ceramics from the Islamic World), exh. cat., Munich, 1989, pp. 92-93, no.31 (ill.)

Sotheby's. Regards sur l’Orient - Tableaux et Sculptures Orientalistes et Art Islamique, Paris, 22 oct. 2015, 02:30 PM

Panneau composé de neuf carreaux de revêtement, Syrie, Damas, art ottoman, seconde moitié du XVIIème siècle

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Panneau composé de neuf carreaux de revêtement, Syrie, Damas, art ottoman, seconde moitié du XVIIème siècleEstimation 6,000 — 8,000 €. Photo: Sotheby's

de forme carrée, en céramique siliceuse à décor peint en bleu et bleu turquoise sur un fond d'engobe blanc, orné de trois arcatures meublées d'un bouquet d'oeillets dans un vase, surmonté d'un cartouche inscrit en arabe, flanqué de lampes suspendues, l'ensemble sur fond inscrit du nom d'Allah, le prophète et ses compagnons, dans un encadrement en bois. Quantité: 9 - 68,5 x 68,5 cm ; 27 by 27 in

ProvenanceAder-Picard-Tajan, Collection de Monsieur X, Paris, 16 novembre 1987, lot 69

BibliographieF. Lehnhoff, Keramik der Islamischen Welt (Ceramics from the Islamic World), exh. cat., Munich, 1989, pp. 98-99, no.34 (ill.)

Sotheby's. Regards sur l’Orient - Tableaux et Sculptures Orientalistes et Art Islamique, Paris, 22 oct. 2015, 02:30 PM

Panneau coranique, Iran, Kashan, art ilkhanide, XIIIème siècle

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Panneau coranique, Iran, Kashan, art ilkhanide, XIIIème siècle. Estimation 4,000 — 6,000 €. Photo: Sotheby's

Sourate al-Fath (XLVIII), verset 25

de forme quadrangulaire, en céramique à décor moulé, lustré, rehaussé de bleu de cobalt, inscrit en thuluthsur fond d'entrelacs, bordure supérieure ornée de motifs floraux - 35 x 34 cm ; 13 3/4 x 13 3/8  in.

Provenance: Sotheby's Londres, 10 octobre 1989, lot 481

Sotheby's. Regards sur l’Orient - Tableaux et Sculptures Orientalistes et Art Islamique, Paris, 22 oct. 2015, 02:30 PM


Rare élément de bordure d'Iznik de style Baba Nakkaç, Turquie, art ottoman, vers 1506-1507

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Rare élément de bordure d'Iznik de style Baba Nakkaç, Turquie, art ottoman, vers 1506-1507Estimation 4,000 — 6,000 €. Photo: Sotheby's

en céramique siliceuse à décor peint en bleu sur un fond d'engobe blanc sous une glaçure transparente, décor d'une mandorle polylobée blanche, flanquée de palmettes en accolades, de fleurons et de rubans noués - 9,5 x 35 cm ; 3 3/4  by 13 3/4  in

ProvenanceEx-collection d'un ancien diplomate français en poste en Egypte vers 1900
Collection privée française, Tours, depuis 1985

NotesThe decoration on these tiles demonstrates that the aesthetic of white decoration reserved against a blue ground continued into the early 16th century (H. Bilgi, Dance of Fire. Iznik Tiles and Ceramics in the Sadberk Hanim Museum and Ömer M. Koç Collections, Istanbul, 2009, pp. 50-51, no.5). However in this period the decoration became more open with a lighter tone of blue, an increase in the relative size of minor motifs and the introduction of contrasting zones of white ground. Few similar tiles are in museums and private collections. Three of them published by M. Jenkins, Islamic Art in The Kuwait National Museum, The al-Sabah Collection, London, 1983, p. 116 ; two by J. Raby, Iznik, London, 1989, p. 87 and no.81-82 ; and one by J. Carswell, Iznik Pottery, London, 1998, p. 38, ill.18. Two more tiles formerly in the collection of J. Soustiel were sold in France (F. de Ricqlès, Paris 1999, 6 December, lot 294).

Sotheby's. Regards sur l’Orient - Tableaux et Sculptures Orientalistes et Art Islamique, Paris, 22 oct. 2015, 02:30 PM

Verseuse zoomorphe, Iran, Kashan, XIIème-XIIIème siècle

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484048894ab8c4c9f0f4333e1ab78ae6

Verseuse zoomorphe, Iran, Kashan, XIIème-XIIIème siècleEstimation 3,000 — 5,000 €. Photo: Sotheby's

sommée d'une tête de taureau, la panse globulaire reposant sur un petit piédouche, un bec verseur en cupule, en céramique siliceuse à décor moulé sous une glaçure bleu de cobalt, réparations avec repeints - 23 cm ; 9 in

BibliographieF. Lehnhoff, Keramik der Islamischen Welt (Ceramics from the Islamic World), exh. cat., Munich, 1989, pp. 66-67, no.18 (ill.)

Sotheby's. Regards sur l’Orient - Tableaux et Sculptures Orientalistes et Art Islamique, Paris, 22 oct. 2015, 02:30 PM

Deux bols, Iran, Kashan, art seljoukide, XIIIème siècle

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Deux bols, Iran, Kashan, art seljoukide, XIIIème siècle

Deux bols, Iran, Kashan, art seljoukide, XIIIème siècleEstimation 2,000 — 3,000 €. Photo: Sotheby's

de forme circulaire reposant sur un petit piédouche, en céramique siliceuse, peint en bleu de cobalt, le premier à décor ajouré, des inscriptions sur le pourtour, le second incisé de motifs végétaux. Quantité: 2 - diam. 19 et 20 cm ; 7 1/2  and 8 in

ProvenanceSotheby's Londres, 10 octobre 1989, lot 510 ; 25 avril 1990, lot 56

TWO KASHAN COBALT BLUE GLAZED POTTERY BOWLS, SELJUK PERSIA, 13TH CENTURY

Sotheby's. Regards sur l’Orient - Tableaux et Sculptures Orientalistes et Art Islamique, Paris, 22 oct. 2015, 02:30 PM

Deux bols de Nishapur, Iran Oriental, Xème-XIème siècles

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Deux bols de Nishapur, Iran Oriental, Xème-XIème siècles

Deux bols de Nishapur, Iran Oriental, Xème-XIème sièclesEstimation 2,000 — 3,000 €. Photo: Sotheby's

de forme tronconique, reposant sur un petit piédouche, en céramique argileuse à décor peint en noir et ocre rouge sur un fond blanc, ornés pour l'un, d'un décor géométrique triparti, et d'une représentation animale stylisée pour l'autre. Quantité: 2 - diam. 19,5 et 20 cm ; 7 3/4  et 8 in

TWO NISHAPUR SLIP-PAINTED IN YELLOW-SATINING-BLACK BOWLS, EASTERN PERSIA, 10TH/11TH CENTURY 

BibliographieF. Lehnhoff, Keramik der Islamischen Welt (Ceramics from the Islamic World), exh. cat., Munich, 1989, pp. 52-53, no.10 (ill.)

Sotheby's. Regards sur l’Orient - Tableaux et Sculptures Orientalistes et Art Islamique, Paris, 22 oct. 2015, 02:30 PM

Un bol et un grand plat, Maroc, Fez, XIXème siècle

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73dac791fbad71c0b412dd797fbb553b

Un bol et un grand plat, Maroc, Fez, XIXème siècleEstimation 1,500 — 2,000 €. Photo: Sotheby's

le bol de forme tronconique, le plat de forme cirulaire à paroi évasée, les deux reposant sur un piédouche, en faïence à décor polychrome stylisé d'oeillets et de rinceaux. Quantité: 2 - diam. 13,5 et 41 cm ; 5 1/3  by 16 1/8  in

TWO UNDERGLAZE-PAINTED POTTERY VESSELS : A BOWL AND A LARGE DISH, MOROCCO, FEZ, 19TH CENTURY

ProvenanceAder-Picard-Tajan, Collection de Monsieur X, Paris, 16 novembre 1987, lot 77 and 99

BibliographieF. Lehnhoff, Keramik der Islamischen Welt (Ceramics from the Islamic World), exh. cat., Munich, 1989, pp. 102-105, no.36-37 (ill.)

Sotheby's. Regards sur l’Orient - Tableaux et Sculptures Orientalistes et Art Islamique, Paris, 22 oct. 2015, 02:30 PM

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