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A pair of Imperial albums by the Qianlong emperor after Ni Zan, inset with jade discs, Qing dynasty, Qianlong period

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A pair of Imperial albums by the Qianlong emperor after Ni Zan, inset with jade discs, Qing dynasty, Qianlong period

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Lot 3007, A pair of Imperial albums by the Qianlong emperor after Ni Zan, inset with jade discs, Qing dynasty, Qianlong periodEstimate 15,000,000 — 20,000,000 HKD (1,718,969 - 2,291,958 EUR). Photo Sotheby's

each album carefully placed within zitan covers, the interior with a silk-lined cavity for the jade jue on the left, the right side with an ink on paper painting, one depicting an overhanging pine branch above a flowing stream and impressed with two seals reading langrun and ju shuiyue zaishou, the other decorated with bamboo shoots issuing behind gnarled jagged rockwork with two seals reading bide and aizhu xuexin xu, the front cover incised and filled in with gilt with a four-character inscription, one reading cangzhi zihua, the otherfuyun shurun; one russet jade jue meticulously worked on both sides as a pair of ferociously confronting dragons, the sides of the disc picked out with scrolls and archaistic geometric motifs; one beige and brown jade archaistic jue well worked on both sides as a stylised pair of confronting fish; all fitted in its original tiered box and cover, the exterior save for the base lined with brocade, the cover topped with a zitan panel finely carved in low relief with lotus flowers and leafy scrollwork
paintings 11.8 by 9.9 cm, 4 5/8 and 3 7/8  in.
jade discs 9.1 and 8.9 cm, 3 1/2  and 3 1/2  in.
albums 13 by 10.9 cm, 5 1/8  by 4 1/4  in. 

A Connoisseur Across Millennia: The Qianlong Emperor’s Pine and Bamboo Album
Yang Danxia, Department of Painting and Calligraphy, Palace Museum, Beijing 

The Qianlong Emperor prided himself in being one of the rare emperors in Chinese history to live to his eighth and ninth decade, and compared his cultivation and art collections to those of Emperor Huizong of the Song Dynasty. The Qianlong court published his art collections in the comprehensive multi-volume catalogues Qinding Midian zhulin Shiqu baoji, which reflected the emperor’s obsession with the brush arts of painting and calligraphy. Qianlong himself was not a skilled painter and calligrapher compared to Huizong and Xuanzong of the Ming, two other emperors known for their artistic bent, let alone the masters of the literati and professional traditions. But he was unsurpassed among historical rulers in the time and mental and emotional energy that he invested in his connoisseurship, collection, cataloguing, and creation of painting and calligraphy. These activities cohered into an aesthetic that would persist and dominate Qing dynasty court art for over a century.

A large number of works of calligraphy and painting by Qianlong himself is extant, outnumbering the oeuvre of any historical master and even his own poetic compositions, which shockingly exceed 40,000. These autographic works include drafts of prose and poetry that Qianlong wrote in his lifetime, calligraphic plaques decorating the palace buildings and gardens, couplets, tieluo or detachable wall paintings, fans and screens celebrating the birthdays of emperors and empresses, and poem-painting albums executed in the styles of historical masters. Some of these works were bestowed as imperial gifts, and others were looted by Anglo-French forces in 1860 and by the Eight-Nation Alliance in 1900, or illicitly smuggled out of the Forbidden City during Puyi’s reign, but the vast majority of Qianlong’s autographic works remain in the Forbidden City as part of the holdings of the Palace Museum collection. The few works reliably attributable to him that have emerged in the market constitute a very small proportion of his oeuvre.

Some 1500 paintings by the Qianlong Emperor are in the Palace Museum, the majority of them scrolls and albums imitating or based on classical masterworks in his collection. Although the emperor claimed only to be an amateur dabbling in painting for his own enjoyment, his inscriptions indicate serious study of classical art. He was especially trained in the styles of Zhao Mengfu and Ni Zan, creating dozens of dated paintings of landscapes, trees, rocks, and bamboos in the latter’s style alone—four direct copies of Ni Zan’s Shizilin tu juan and Shushi huapu ze and copies of his Jiang’an wangshan tu and Shanshui xiaojing, among others. Aside from a few close copies, Qianlong’s works after Ni Zan were mostly free rehearsals of Ni’s compositions and interpretations of his brushwork. This kind of creative imitation was a clear manifestation of Qianlong’s philosophy of “following the ancestors”: the Shunzhi, Kangxi, and Yongzheng Emperors—the last being Qianlong’s own father—all subscribed to this philosophy in their calligraphy and painting. It also reflected the persistence of Dong Qichang’s archaic aesthetics from the late Ming through the mid Qing period.

The miniature album was the most common format of Qianlong’s paintings, particularly albums of four “sketches from life.” He tirelessly painted the classic combinations of pine, bamboo, plum, and rock or orchid. Although he did not always mention his stylistic models, his compositions and brushwork most frequently refer to Ming and pre-Ming masters such as Zhao Mengfu, Ni Zan, Shen Zhou, and Wen Zhengming. The present pair of sketches by Qianlong, one depicting an old pine tree and a flowing stream and the other depicting secluded bamboos and elegant rocks, are in the style of the Yuan dynasty.

Each mounted in an individual album facing a jade carved in archaicising style, the two works are painted on Southern-Song scripture paper (cangjing zhi). Each painting proper measures 11.8 by 9.9 cm.

In the first leaf, a gnarled old pine tree with sparse needles hovers delicately over a flowing stream. The painting combines the styles of Wang Meng of the Yuan and Xiang Shengmo of the Ming. The pine’s branches extend laterally from the bottom right, like dragons swirling in a valley. The brushwork is mostly centre-tipped and executed slowly, creating saturated and rounded lines. The scale-like patterns and unpainted negative spaces on the tree trunk accentuate its age. The river and sloped bank under the pine are rendered in a combination of light ink washes and drawn lines, evoking the stillness and frozenness of a secluded valley in the dead of winter. They also demonstrate Qianlong’s inheritance, through Xiang Shengmo, of Song and Yuan painting, with its characteristics of conscientious centre-tipped brushwork and careful compositions. The composition and brushwork style of this leaf can be seen in many of Qianlong’s albums of sketches of the “four friends of winter,” of which over twenty examples are in the Palace Museum collection and which have survived in private hands as well. The style can also been seen in the grand tieluo that Qianlong painted himself to decorate palace buildings and gardens, including Hansui sanyi tu of 1772 and Panlong song tu of 1755 (which appeared at China Guardian’s auctions in 2007 and 2010 respectively). The pines in the latter works are stylistically consistent to the one in this leaf, which shows an earlier phase of Qianlong’s style.

The second leaf depicts a slender and elegant rock covered with moss, several bamboos, and grass on a slope. From the composition to the rendition of interweaving of branches and leaves, the bamboos, rock, and moss are clearly based on the late style of Ni Zan, as seen in several works by Ni recorded in Shiqu baoji chubian. These works were undoubtedly the source of Qianlong’s bamboo painting style. The figuration and texturing of the rock are derived from Ni Zan’s works (fig. 2) like Qiuting jiashu tu and Wuzhu xiushi tu (both in the Palace Museum collection, the former recorded in Shiqu baoji chubian and the latter collected by Qianlong but not recorded in Shiqu baojifig. 1). Of course, compared to the Yuan master, Qianlong comes across as an amateurish and immature painter.

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Fig. 2: Ni Zan (1301-74), Gumu zhu shi tu [Painting of old tree, bamboo and rock], hanging scroll, ink on paper, late Yuan /early Ming dynasty, Collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing.

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Fig. 1: Ni Zan (1301-74), Wu zhu xiushi tu [Painting of parasol tree, bamboo and elegant rock], hanging scroll, ink on paper, late Yuan /early Ming dynasty, Collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing.

Qianlong produced many paintings in the composition and brushwork style style of Ni Zan, such as Linghan qingjing tu ce of 1747 (in the Palace Museum collection and recorded in Shiqu baoji sanbian), in which the bamboos and rock are almost magnified versions of the ones seen in the present leaf. Qianlong’s paintings after Ni Zan have also appeared sporadically in the auction market, such as Fang Ni Zan shushi tu zhou of 1754 (Poly Auctions, Spring 2014) and Lin Ni Zan huapu liuzhen ce(Hosokawa collection, Sotheby’s Hong Kong, 8th October 2014, lot 3116). Reflecting decades of study of Ni Zan's landscapes, rocks, and bamboos, these paintings are precious fruits of the Qianlong Emperor's artistic achievement.

Although many large-scale calligraphic scrolls and plaques by Qianlong have survived, his studies and copies of classical paintings are mostly in the format of small scrolls andalbums. Produced consistently throughout his lifetime, these small paintings in archaic style form the backbone of Qianlong’s painting oeuvre. There are two reasons for this phenomenon. First, the emperor tended to paint on precious ancient paper like scripture paper, jade-plaque paper (yuban jian), and slant-patterned paper (cewen zhi), which generally did not survive in large sizes. Second, working on a small scale allowed the busy emperor to paint whenever and wherever suited him, and moreover concealed technical errors and insufficiencies. The large-scale and compositionally complex landscapes and figurative paintings signed by Qianlong, such as Panshan tu zhouXixiyan shiyi ce, and Shijing tu ce in the Palace Museum, contain a relatively large number of passages ghost-painted by officials and court painters. By contrast, and to the delight of most collectors, the small-scale works signed by Qianlong were mostly by his own hand. Moreover, the emperor lived most closely with his personal favourites, which he placed on his desks and displayed in his studies.

Aside from the above, the present albums also reflect Qianlong’s emphasis on the unity of style in painting and calligraphy, mounting, and aesthetic judgement and his confidence in his connoisseurship and literary cultivation.

The unity of inscription, calligraphic style, and painting

Due to limited space, Qianlong inscribed only three characters on each of the paintings: Fu liuquan ('Over a flowing fountain') and Yi wenshi ('Leaning against an elegant rock') respectively. The succinct and carefully positioned inscriptions enliven the paintings ingeniously. They are written in small regular script in the style of the Two Wangs, reflecting the influence of Kangxi and Yongzheng, who also studied the Two Wangs. Qianlong approached the Two Wangs' lineage first by studying Wang Xizhi’s Yueyi lun, then the rubbing copy in the Leshantang collection of his Kuaiqing tang tie, and then such works in the lineage as Wang Xianzhi’s Yuban shisan hang and Zhao Mengfu’s Xianxie gong zhuan. Qianlong devoted the most energy to the study of Yuban shisan hang, which was regarded as the “ultimate example of small regular script” at the time, and copied it repeatedly throughout his life, as recorded in the various versions of Shiqu baoji. Through years of diligent copying and studying, Qianlong honed his calligraphy in small regular script to a level of fluency and close resemblance to his models. The characters inscribed in the present album are generously spaced, with elegant and lucid brush strokes. Typical of Qianlong’s small-regular script between the 9th and 15th year of his reign, the calligraphic style seen here is important evidence for the dating of the album.

The unity of seal text and painting 

In the pine leaf, a seal impression beneath the inscription reads Langrun (this seal is recorded in Qingdai dihou xiyin pu, p. 91), and another at the opposite corner reads Ju shuiyue zaishou (ibid., p. 267). In the bamboo leaf, a seal impression beneath the inscription reads Bide (ibid., p. 91), and another at the opposite corner reads Aizhu xuexin xu (ibid., p. 266).

Bide ('comparing to virtue') and Langrun ('lucid and nourished') are casual seals that Qianlong often impressed on paintings; both belong to one set of the seals of his study. The latter can frequently be seen in Qianlong’s pine paintings because it refers to the praise by the Tang dynasty Emperor Taizong of Xuanzhuang’s Preface to the Holy Teaching: “Wind amidst pines and the moon in water cannot match its purity and elegance; holy dew and bright pearls cannot match its lucidity and nourishment.” Bide is a reference to a sentence in Confucius’s Liji pinyi: “The gentlemen [of yore] compared virtue to jade.” The two seal texts not only reinforce the moral virtues symbolised by pine and bamboo, but also correspond to the two jades.

The two five-character seals impressed at the lower left corners belong to the same seal set, and are the most frequently impressed seals in Qianlong’s pine and bamboo paintings. Excerpted from poems by the Tang dynasty poets Bai Juyi and Yu Shiliang, their texts emphasize the literary and poetic qualities of the paintings and open a new dimension of meaning. The four seals impressed on the present paintings animate and complement each other, and the arresting colour of the impressions makes the paintings more attractive.

Characteristics of Qianlong period mounting

The mounting of these folding albums is typical of the Qianlong period. The polished zitan wood covers of the pine and bamboo paintings are inscribed respectively with the four-character poetic phrases Cangzhi zihua and Fuyun shurun in a seal script that is stylistically close to Dong Bangda, an important court official and calligrapher of the period. These phrases extend the meaning of the enclosed paintings.

Each of the albums is mounted in the 'butterfly' style, with two single leaves facing each other. Each painting leaf is bordered with light-blue dijuan silk. Each jade leaf consists of dozens of paper layers adhered to the zitan covers and carved with an opening fitting the jade. The silk border on each jade leaf is the same as on the opposite leaf, but is additionally decorated with fine-line drawings of auspicious symbols like dragons and qiankun in gold. The bamboo leaf maintains its original mounting, backed by imitation Xuande era paper of the Qing dynasty and lined on both sides with narrow strips of dyed pizhipaper. The pine leaf has been repaired, its backing paper changed to mianlian paper, and the paper linings are partly missing. On the edge of the backing paper is a yellow label bearing the inscription of “one hundred and eighty six,” which was likely the object’s number in the court inventory. These numbered yellow labels are commonly found on scrolls and albums formerly in the Qing imperial collection.

In the Qing court, autographic calligraphy and paintings by Qianlong were mounted together with jades in two ways. The first was to add decorative jade accessories to a painting or work of calligraphy, such as the jade plaques, tubes, and weights on folding and round fans; or to embellish the wood containers of the emperor’s works with jade inlays. The second way was to mount Qianlong’s works alongside jades—typically discs, but also rings and half-discs—in albums, but not many such albums have survived. The Palace Museum collection holds only a handful of examples, including Wanxu jiuli ce (fig. 3).

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Fig. 3: Imperial album by the Qianlong Emperor, with jade bi disc, ink on paper, Qing dynasty, Qianlong period, dated to the 14th year of the reign (corresponding to 1749), Collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing.

Qianlong was fond of ensembles throughout his life. Even before he ascended the throne, he invited several dozen painters, poets, and officials to create a series of sixteen large-scale albums called Huishi luozhen, each album containing twelve leaves of painting and of calligraphy respectively. These albums, recorded in Shiqu baoji chubian, were also lavishly decorated. During his reign, Qianlong was no less excited by unexpected combinations and continued to order the creation of albums, which gradually evolved into a standard format combining painting and calligraphy with imitation antique jades and enamel, carved lacquer, and inlaid craft objects. As examples of the ensemble art of the Qianlong court, in the collections of the National Palace Museum in Taipei and the Palace Museum in Beijing are a dozen or so fans and several dozen ensembles of scrolls, albums, and miniature albums carefully housed in carved lacquer or zitan boxes.

It is a commonplace that artworks are playthings for adults. Being a painter, calligrapher, and connoisseur was not Qianlong’s ultimate objective. In his nonchalant-seeming collecting activities, Qianlong wanted to express himself not only as the ruler of a vast empire, but also as an open-minded, elegant, and learned sage-king in accordance with Confucian philosophy and worthy of admiration by later generations. He was determined to be the inheritor and grand synthesizer of native Chinese cultural traditions, especially the literati traditions of painting and calligraphy centred in the Jiangnan region. By copying and studying the literati classics and works of art diligently and broadly, he gained greater authority to interpret and critique cultural traditions, and moreover prepared his reputation for posterity with his own literary and artistic output. Such were the grand ambitions in Qianlong’s game of collecting.

Sotheby's. Emperors’ Playthings – a Connoisseur’s Collection, Hong Kong, 06 Apr 2016, 02:20 PM


An exceptional Imperial Mughal-style white jade 'ram's' cup, Qing dynasty, Qianlong period

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Lot 3015, An exceptional Imperial Mughal-style white jade 'ram's' cup, Qing dynasty, Qianlong period. Estimate 8,000,000 — 12,000,000 HKD (916,783 - 1,375,175 EUR). Photo Sotheby's

the lustrous and even white stone exquisitely worked in the form of a lobed floral bloom with delicate rounded walls rising steeply from the foot, one side elegantly tapering into an openwork handle modelled in the form of a ram's head depicted turned to one side, the beast sensitively rendered with a serene expression with a slightly open mouth and a beard conjoined to the exterior of the vessel, its head accentuated by a pair of precisely striated curved horns, one extending into and silhouetting the edge of the vessel, the exterior of the vessel decorated in low relief with a band of upright acanthus leaves, all supported on a splayed foot depicted as a lotus bloom with furled petal tips radiating from a rounded centre - 19 cm, 7 1/2  in.

NoteExquisitely worked cups carved in this florid yet masculine fashion and made of the purest white jade have their origins in Hindustan in the Mughal period. Mughal jade pieces were first introduced to China around the middle of the Qianlong Emperor's reign. They were submitted as tribute to the emperor who quickly grew very fond of them. The first carved Mughal jade bowl sent from Central Asia as tribute is recorded for AD 1756, and thereafter tribute gifts of this type continued to arrive throughout the emperor's reign and beyond. At the same time Muslim jade carvers were brought to work in the Palace Workshops to fashion similar wares and as early as 1764, exact copies of Indian jades held at the palace were ordered from the Chinese craftsmen working at the court. The emperor was fascinated by these beautiful objects and wrote more than seventy poems eulogising the many Mughal-style jade carvings in his collection. In these poems he praised the exceptional skills of the carvers together with the purity of the material. A poem, inscribed on a magnificent white jade shell-shaped cup sold in these rooms, 25th April 2004, lot 50, and composed by the emperor in the mid-Autumn of the jiawu year (equivalent to 1774 AD) is titled In Praise of a Hindustan Jade Drinking Vessel. In this poem the emperor wrote:

Jade from the Western Kun is matchless 
          for its skilled craftsmanship.
Water mills grinding the jade as thin as paper,
          making drinking vessels and bowls for the officials.
Differing in form from what craftsmen have recorded 
          in the Zhouli.

Half a bulging caltrop, turned-over lotus leaf,
          a kind of gardenia supporting the base.
Or one could compare it to an opened oyster shell,
          like a bright moon clearly reflected in the water.
The hands find no marks, the eye finds hints
          of how it was conceived and executed.
The tools handled with clever contrivance and clear
          determination.
I simply cannot keep myself from gazing at it again
          and again.

From the final words of this poem it is clear that the Qianlong Emperor was full of admiration by the beauty of the cup and his affection for the piece as well as his appreciation of the craftsmanship had no bounds. At least twenty-five extant Mughal-style jades bear the emperor's poems, engraved in the palace workshops (For further historical details see the article by Teng Shu-ping in the Catalogue of a Special Exhibition of Hindustan Jade in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1983, pp. 9-109).

Exquisitely fashioned from a fine white stone to form a stunningly delicate yet equally masculine vessel, this piece is rooted firmly in the tradition of Hindustan carving of the Mughal period. The ram’s head, modelled with carefully detailed facial features and combed beard, curves gracefully before flaring into a contrasting gourd-form cup. The exterior of the cup further complements the delicate scalloped form, which has been elegantly carved with acanthus leaves, and the foot modelled in the form of a fleshy lotus flower. The milky white jade heightens the sense of mystery and ethereality to undoubtedly cater to the Qianlong Emperor’s taste for the exotic.

Mughal-style ram's-head cups made during the Qianlong period follow two distinctive forms and styles: an asymmetric gourd shape that closely imitates the famous Shah Jahan cup, and a Chinese variation of the Mughal version that has a deeper cup that is of lobed form. The present piece follows the Shah Jahan cup closely, particularly in the thinly-carved walls, elegantly rendered head and curving neck of the ram, and highly floral decoration. The Shah Jahan cup, in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (IS.12-1962), is one of the finest pieces of Mughal jade recorded. That cup, which is attributed to the 17th century (it also bears an inscription relating it to Shah Jahan and dating it to 1657), would appear to predate the present piece by about a century. It is recorded since 1868, when it was in the collection of Colonel Charles Seton Guthrie, late of the Bengal Engineers, who went to India in 1828, and it entered the Museum's collection in 1962. It is illustrated and discussed by Robert Skelton, The Indian Heritage, Court Life and Arts Under Mughal rule, Victoria & Albert Museum, London, 1982, p.151, no.12, and by Susan Stronge, Made for Mughal Emperors – Royal Treasures from Hindustan, London, 2010, p. 215, pls. 177-8 (fig. 1).

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Drinking vessel in the form of a shell made for the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan, India, 1657© Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

A cup of this type, but lacking the detailed curve of the ram’s neck and with a flat floral foot, in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, was included in the Museum’s exhibition Exquisite Beauty – Islamic Jades,  2008, cat. no. 245, together with another with a flat oval foot and inlaid eyes, cat. no. 246; and a cup, but without a foot and the head placed vertically, published in James C.Y. Watt, Chinese Jades from the Collection of the Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, 1989, pl. 99; and a cup of this form, but with handle carved in the form of a goose head and inscribed with an imperial poem, from the Collection of Wilfred Fleisher and later sold at Christie’s London, 11th November 2003, lot 68.

Chinese artists were quick to assimilate certain elements of the foreign art form into their native tradition to form a new and characteristically Chinese style; see one in the National Palace Museum, included in the exhibition op. cit., cat. no. 266; another in the Palace Museum, Beijing, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures in the Palace Museum. Jadeware (III), Hong Kong, 1995, pl. 161; and a cup from the collection of Dr and Mrs Marvin Gordon, published in Magic, Art and Order. Jade in Chinese Culture, Palm Springs Desert Museum, Palm Springs, 1990, p. 152, pl. 164. See also a cup, from the T.B. Kitson collection, sold in our London rooms, 21st February 1961, lot 291, included in the exhibitions Chinese Jade Throughout the Ages, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1975, cat. no. 439, and The Woolf Collection of Chinese Jade, Sotheby’s London, 2013, cat no. 60; and another from the Tournet collection, offered in these rooms, 11th April 2008, lot 2818.

Sotheby's. Emperors’ Playthings – a Connoisseur’s Collection, Hong Kong, 06 Apr 2016, 02:20 PM

Important Sapphire and Diamond Ring

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Lot 1739, Important 38.88 carats Burmese 'Royal Blue' Sapphire and Diamond Ring. Estimate 14,000,000 — 16,000,000 HKD (1,618,458 - 1,849,667 EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

Centring on a cushion-shaped sapphire weighing 38.88 carats, within an openwork bombé surround set with marquise-shaped and circular-cut diamonds, to the diamond-set hoop, the diamonds together weighing approximately 8.00 carats, mounted in 18 karat white gold. Ring size:5¾

Accompanied by AGL and Gübelin reports numbered CS 65502 and 15025114, dated 22 December 2014 and 14 February 2015 respectively, stating that the 38.88 carat sapphire is natural, of Burmese (Myanmar) origin, with no indications of heating, and the colour may also be called 'Royal Blue' in the trade. Also accompanied by AGL letter stating that ' Top quality sapphire of this very large size and superior quality are exceedingly rare.'

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels & Jadeite, Hong Kong, 05 avr. 2016, 02:00 PM

A rare blue and white 'fruit and flower' hexafoil bowl, Xuande six-character mark and of the period

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A rare blue and white 'fruit and flower' hexafoil bowl, Xuande six-character mark in underglaze within a double circle and of the period

A rare blue and white 'fruit and flower' hexafoil bowl, Xuande six-character mark in underglaze within a double circle and of the period

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Lot 99, A rare blue and white 'fruit and flower' hexafoil bowl, Xuande six-character mark in underglaze within a double circle and of the period (1426-1435)Estimate 800,000 – HK$1,200,000 HKD ($103,625 - $155,437). Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016. 

The interior of the shallow widely-flaring conical bowl is painted in rich blue tones with a medallion enclosing a fruiting and flowering peach below individual sprays of lotus, camellia, chrysanthemum and other flowers around the lobed rim. The exterior is painted with fruiting sprays of grapes, pomegranate, longyan, peach, persimmon and lychee above individual floral sprays and a classic scroll around the foot. 8 7/8 in. (22.7 cm.) diam., box

Provenance: Carl Alfred Jensen (1886-1953), Denmark

Notes: Carl Alfred Jensen was a Danish engineer who worked for the Great Northern Telegraph Company in Denmark. He was stationed in various cities in China with his family between 1911 and 1927.

Similar examples from important public and private collections have been published, including one in the Palace Museum collection, Beijing, illustrated in Blue and White Porcelain with Underglazed Red (I), The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Hong Kong, 2000, p. 159, no. 151; two in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, one is illustrated in Catalogue of a Special Exhibition of Hsuan-te Period Porcelain, Taipei, 1980, pl. 36, the other in the Catalogue of the Special Exhibition of Selected Hsüan-te Imperial Porcelains of the Ming Dynasty, Taipei, 1998, p. 178-179, pl. 62, one from the Percival David Foundation, now housed at the British Museum, and illustrated inOriental Ceramics, The World's Great Collections, vol. 6, Tokyo, 1982, pl. 88; one in the Freer Gallery of Art, included in ibid., vol. 9, pl. 102; one in the Shanghai Museum of Art, illustrated by Lu Minghua in Mingdai guanyao ciqi, Shanghai, 2007, fig. 3-34; one in the Capital Museum, Beijing and illustrated in Shoudu Bowuguan cangci xuan, Beijing, 1991, pl. 97; one in the Jingdezhen Ceramic Museum and published in Keitokuchin jiki, Kyoto, 1982, pl. 38 bottom; one included in the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, illustrated by He Li, Chinese Ceramics, A New Comprehensive Survey, New York, 1996, fig. 403; one published in the Asia Society Handbook of the Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd Collection, New York, 1982, pl. 73; and another one formerly in the Ataka Collection, which was included in the Oriental Ceramic Exhibition, 1979, and illustrated in the Catalogue, no. 102.

Compare also with bowls of this pattern sold at auction: the first from the collections of Mr and Mrs R.H.R. Palmer and Jingguangtang, sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 3 November 1996, lot 546; from the Ira and Nancy Koger collection, sold at Sotheby's New York, 27 November 1990, lot 6; from the Su Lin An collection sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 10 October 1995, lot 315; from The Manno Museum, Osaka, Japan, sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 31 May 2010, lot 1856; and a bowl formerly in the Meiyintang Collection, was sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 5 October 2011, lot 12.

Christie's. THE PAVILION SALE - CHINESE CERAMICS AND WORKS OF ART, 5 April 2016, Hong Kong

A pair of blue and white 'dragon and phoenix' bowls, Late Ming dynasty

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A pair of blue and white 'dragon and phoenix' bowls, Late Ming dynasty

Lot 100, A pair of blue and white 'dragon and phoenix' bowls, Late Ming dynasty. Estimate 40,000 – HK$60,000 HKD ($5,181 - $7,772). Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016. 

Each bowl is finely painted on the exterior in underglaze blue with a dragon and phoenix divided by a flaming pearl and stylised clouds. The interior is decorated with a central medallion enclosing a four-clawed dragon.The base is inscribed with an apocryphal Chenghua six-character mark in underglaze blue within a circle. 5 3/4 in. (14.7 cm.) diam., boxes

Provenance: Sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 26 November 1980, lot 226

Christie's. THE PAVILION SALE - CHINESE CERAMICS AND WORKS OF ART, 5 April 2016, Hong Kong

Important Sapphire and Diamond Ring

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Lot 1874, Important 12.00 carats Kashmir Sapphire and Diamond Ring. Estimate 14,000,000 — 16,000,000 HKD (1,618,458 - 1,849,667 EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

Centring on a modified cushion-shaped sapphire weighing 12.00 carats, flanked on each side by bullet-shaped diamonds, mounted in platinum. Ring size: 6

Accompanied by Gübelin, SSEF  and AGL reports numbered 16025010, 84266 and CS1073170, dated 22 February 2016, 24 February 2016, and 25 January 2016 respectively, stating that the sapphire is natural, of Kashmir origin, with no indications of heating. Gübelin states that the sapphire 'possesses a richly saturated and homogeneous colour, combined with a high degree of transparency, and a finely proportioned cut. Such a combination of characteristics is rare in natural Kashmir sapphires of this size.'
SSEF Appendix Letter states that the sapphire ‘exhibits an important size and weight of 12.00ct combined with an attractive saturated blue colour and a very fine purity…a natural sapphire from Kashmir of this size and quality is rare and exceptional.’  Also accompanied by SSEF Premium Appendix folio.
AGL Appendix Letter states that 'This sapphire has received the highest origin determination issued by AGL: ClassicTMKashmir...the sapphire also possesses the quintessential velvety texture and high clarity.' Also accompanied by AGL JewelFolio.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels & Jadeite, Hong Kong, 05 avr. 2016, 02:00 PM

A pair of blue and white 'floral' dishes, Yongzheng six-character marks and of the period (1723-1735)

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A pair of blue and white 'floral' dishes, Yongzheng six-character marks in underglaze blue within double circles and of the period (1723-1735)

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Lot 102, A pair of blue and white 'floral' dishes, Yongzheng six-character marks in underglaze blue within double circles and of the period (1723-1735)Estimate HK$260,000 – HK$350,000 ($33,678 - $45,336). Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016.

Each dish is finely painted in underglaze blue to the interior central medallion with four large blossoms and continuous leafy vines, below a band of peonies on the well. The reverse is similarly decorated with dense foliage. 7 7/8 in. (20 cm.) diam., box

Provenance: Sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 8 October 1990, lot 795

Christie's. THE PAVILION SALE - CHINESE CERAMICS AND WORKS OF ART, 5 April 2016, Hong Kong

Fancy Deep Blue Diamond and Diamond Ring

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Lot 1738, Fancy Deep Blue Diamond and Diamond RingEstimate 7,500,000 — 8,000,000 HKD (867,031 - 924,833EUR EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

Centring on a pear-shaped fancy deep blue diamond weighing 1.80 carats, surrounded by eight circular-cut diamonds together weighing 2.68 carats, to the circular-cut diamond and pink diamond scrolled gallery and diamond-set shoulders, mounted in platinum and 18 karat pink gold. Ring size: 6

Accompanied by GIA report numbered 1156094112, dated 18 April 2013, stating that the 1.80 carat diamond is natural, Fancy Deep Blue Colour, VS2 Clarity.
Further accompanied by eight GIA reports, dated from 5 December 2013 to 9 September 2014, stating that the eight diamonds ranging from 0.34 to 0.33 carat are D to E Colour, VVS1 to VVS2 Clarity.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels & Jadeite, Hong Kong, 05 avr. 2016, 02:00 PM


Lê Phổ (1907-2001), Après le déjeuner (after the lunch)

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Lê Phổ (1907-2001), Après le déjeuner

Lot 249, Lê Phổ (1907-2001), Après le déjeuner (after the lunch). Signed in Vietnamese and Chinese. Oil on silk fixed on board, 79 by 53 cm; 31 1/8  by 21 in. Estimate 120,000 — 180,000 HKD (13,666 - 20,499 EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

ProvenanceWally Findlay Galleries, New York
Private Collection, USA

Sotheby's. Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asian Art, Hong Kong, 04 avr. 2016, 10:00 AM

Lê Phổ (1907-2001), Jeune femme au foulard blanc (Young woman with a white scarf)

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Lê Phổ (1907-2001), Jeune femme au foulard blanc

Lot 252, Lê Phổ (1907-2001), Jeune femme au foulard blanc (Young woman with a white scarf). Signed in Vietnamese and Chinese and stamped with a seal of the artist. Ink and gouache on silk fixed on cardboard, 27.5 by 20 cm; 10 3/4  by 7 3/4  in. Estimate 150,000 — 200,000 HKD (17,082 - 22,776 EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

ProvenancePrivate Collection, France

Sotheby's. Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asian Art, Hong Kong, 04 avr. 2016, 10:00 AM

Lê Phổ (1907-2001), Vase de fleurs (vase of flowers)

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Lê Phổ (1907-2001), Vase de fleurs

Lot 262, Lê Phổ (1907-2001), Vase de fleurs (Vase of flowers). Signed in Vietnamese and Chinese. Oil on canvas, 90 by 116 cm; 35 1/4  by 45 1/2  in. Estimate 150,000 — 200,000 HKD (17,082 - 22,776 EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

 Sotheby's. Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asian Art, Hong Kong, 04 avr. 2016, 10:00 AM

A rare purple-splashed 'Jun' bowl, Northern Song – Jin dynasty

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A rare purple-splashed 'Jun' bowl, Northern Song – Jin dynasty

A rare purple-splashed 'Jun' bowl, Northern Song – Jin dynasty

Lot 2903, A rare purple-splashed 'Jun' bowl, Northern Song – Jin dynastyEstimate 2,000,000 — 3,000,000 HKD (231,590 - 347,385EUR EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

well potted with gently rounded sides rising to a slightly incurved rim, covered overall in a sky-blue glaze with a mottled splash of deep lavender tone to the interior, the glaze suffused with a pale crackle and transmuting to a mushroom tone around the rim, all resting on a neatly knife-pared foot unglazed revealing the buff-orange body - 12.6 cm, 4 7/8  in. 

ProvenanceCollection of Dr and Mrs Marvin L. Gordon, San Francisco.
J.J. Lally & Co. Oriental Art, New York, September 2009.

ExhibitedJ.J. Lally & Co. Oriental Art, The Gordon Collection: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art, New York, 2009, cat. no. 28.

Note'Jun' ware, made in kilns of Henan and other provinces, ranks among the Five Great Wares of the Song dynasty (960-1279) and is one of the most famous types of Chinese ceramics.  Purple-splashed 'Jun' bowls of this classic shape are remarkable for their splendid colouration, which display a range of blue and lavender tones. In this particular successful example, the copper-red pigment forms distinct colouration of purple splashes against a bright lavender-blue ground. The brilliant purple splashes on 'Jun' ware vessels were produced by the addition of copper oxides to the unfired glaze for firing in a reduction kiln, a decorative technique that appeared on 'Jun' wares from around the end of the 11th century. In the 2001 excavation of the Jun ware kiln site at Liujiamen, Shenhou, Yuzhou city, Henan, Jun ware shards with large areas of red and purple were found in strata ascribed to the late Northern Song (960-1127), see 'Henan sheng Yuzhou shi Shenhou zhen Liujiamen Junyao yizhi fajue jianbao/Excavation of Jun Kiln at Liujiamen, Yuzhou, Henan’, Wenwu/Cultural Relics, 2003, no. 11, fig. 19. In the same excavation, a shard of a small bowl with rounded sides and a slightly inverted rim, reminiscent of the current bowl, was found in the same stratum, see a line drawing illustrated ibid., p. 34, fig. 15.7.

Although on many 'Jun' pieces a splashed effect is achieved, it is likely that a brush was often used for the application of the copper-based pigment, with brush strokes evident in some cases, such as on a basin discussed in Regina Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, London, 1994-2010, vol. 2, no. 674. Such copper-red designs provide a striking contrast to the thick, bright blue glaze underneath, giving each vessel decorated in this manner its unique design.

Jun ware bowls are represented in world-famous collections, such as the British Museum, London, from the collection of Sir Percival David, illustrated in Margaret Medley, The Chinese Potter, Oxford, 1976, fig. 83, and in the Palace Museum, Beijing, published in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum. Porcelain of the Song Dynasty (I), Hong Kong, 1996, pl. 225. Compare also two bowls in the Baur Collection, Geneva, included in John Ayers, The Baur Collection, Geneva; Chinese Ceramics, vol. 1, Geneva, 1968, nos. A31 and A32.

See also a bowl from the Schoenlicht and H.M. Knight collections, sold in our London rooms, 13th December 1955, lot 76, and in these rooms, 18th May 1982, lot 109, and now in the Matsuoka Museum of Art, Tokyo, included in the Museum’s exhibitionTōyō tōji meihin zuroku [Illustrated Catalogue of Famous Pieces of Oriental Pottery and Porcelain], Tokyo, 1991, pl. 52. Another vessel of this type, its surface almost completely covered in purple splashes, formerly in the collections of Richard Bennett and George Eumorfopoulos, and illustrated in R.L. Hobson, The George Eumorfopoulos Collection of Chinese, Corean and Persian Pottery and Porcelain, London, 1925-8, pl. XXVII, fig. B 83, was sold in our London rooms, 8th November 2006, lot 55. Two bowls from the Edward T. Chow collection, amongst the best extant examples, were sold in our London rooms, 16th December 1980, lots 264 and 265, and again in these rooms, the former on 19th May 1987, lot 209, and later in the T.T. Tsui collection; the latter on 7th June 2000, lot 93. Compare also a Junyao bowl sold in our London rooms, 11th November 2015, lot 68, and two sold in our New York rooms, 15th September 2010, lots 303 and 308, and included in the exhibition Junyao, Eskenazi, London, 2013, cat. nos. 7 and 8.

Sotheby's. Literati / Curiosity II, Hong Kong, 05 Apr 2016, 10:15 AM

Li Huayi (B. 1948), Ensemble for stone, 1997

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Lot 2845, Li Huayi (B. 1948), Ensemble for stone, 1997. Estimate 1,800,000 — 2,200,000 HKD (208,431 - 254,749 EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

signed LI HUAYI, dated 1997, and with one seal of the artist, ink and colour on paper, framed, 65.7 by 129.5 cm, 25 7/8  by 51 in.

ProvenanceKaikodo, New York.
A private Asian collection

ExhibitedUSA, New York, Kaikodo, In Concert: Landscapes by Li Huayi and Zhang Hong, 6-30 November, 1999, pp.56-59

LiteratureLi Huayi at 60, The Ink Society, Hong Kong, China, 2008, p.26-27

Sotheby's. Literati / Curiosity II, Hong Kong, 05 Apr 2016, 10:15 AM

A superb Ying scholar’s rock, Song–Ming dynasty

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Lot 2834, A superb Ying scholar’s rock, Song–Ming dynastyEstimate 1,200,000 — 1,800,000 HKD (138,954 - 208,431 EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

monolithic in stature, the magnificently wrought-out column of almost triangular section with each face displaying a distinct character, one side punctuated by chasms, another with mild furrows and a further with slight protrusions creating a swaying profile, with a clear metallic resonance when struck, the asperous surface of the lustrous black rock with cream-coloured veins, wood stand - 42.5 cm, 16 3/4  in.

Note'Ying' rocks were appreciated for their special aesthetic and spiritual qualities through poetry and essays written in the Tang Dynasty. By the Song Dynasty, rocks were depicted in monumental landscape paintings offering a microcosm of the universe.  Paintings of rocks such as the current example illustrate the intimate relationship between paintings and three-dimensional scuptures. Ten Views of a Fantastic Rock, by Wu Bin (act. 1583-1626) with calligraphy by Mi Wanzhong (1570 - after 1628), sold in our New York rooms, 6th December 1989, lot 39, shows a single scholar's rocks depicted from all angles with inscriptions discussing the measurements and appearance of the rock. For other 'ying' rocks of comparable quality sold at auction, see two Ming to Qing dynasty 'ying' rocks, the first from the Jiansongge collection, the second from the Water, Pine and Stone Retreat collection, sold in these rooms, 11th April 2008, lot 2723 and 8th April 2010, lot 1702 respectively; and a Qing dynasty 'ying' rock from the Richard Rosenblum collection, sold in these rooms, 7th April 2014, lot 3666.

Sotheby's. Literati / Curiosity II, Hong Kong, 05 Apr 2016, 10:15 AM

Jean Dunand (1877-1942), "Jeune femme", circa 1929

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Lot 86, Jean Dunand (1877-1942), "Jeune femme", circa 1929. Estimation : 30 000 € / 50 000 €. Photo Tajan

Panneau en laque brune arrachée, puissante stylisation africaniste, rehauts rouges et or, fond argent. Signé en bas à gauche. Encadrement d'origine, porte un cachet "Made in France". Dim. à vue : 83 x 63 cm

A brown lacquered engraved panel, Africanist figure, red and gold highlights, silver background. Signed. Original frame with stamp. Dim. seen : 32 5/8 x 24 3/4 in.

Bibliographie : Félix Marcilhac, "Jean Dunand vie et œuvre", Les Éditions de l’Amateur, Paris, 1991, modèle à rapprocher de ceux reproduits pp. 227 à 231.

TAJAN, Arts Décoratifs du XXe siècle, le 31 Mars 2016 à 17h 


Emile Lenoble (1876-1940), Grand vase balustre en grès

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Lot 58, Emile Lenoble (1876-1940), Grand vase balustre en grèsEstimation : 6 000 € / 8 000 €. Photo Tajan

corps galbé, col droit ourlé, décor de frises africanistes sur l'épaulement et à la base du corps, émail vert jaspé sur fond noir. Signature du cachet en creux. Haut. 40 cm

A large baluster stoneware vase, rounded body, Africanist friezes on the shoulder and base of the body, green enamel on black background. Stamped. Height 15 3 /4 in.

TAJAN, Arts Décoratifs du XXe siècle, le 31 Mars 2016 à 17h 

Emile Lenoble (1876-1940), Grand vase en grès

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Lot 56, Emile Lenoble (1876-1940),Grand vase en grèsEstimation : 2 000 € / 3 000 €. Photo Tajan

présentant des traces de tournage, corps bilobé galbé, large jonc soulignant l'ouverture, émail bleu iznik finement bullé. Signature du cachet monogramme. Haut. 34,8 cm

A large stoneware vase, rounded body, iznik blue enamel. Signed with monogrammed stamp. Height 13 3/4 in.

TAJAN, Arts Décoratifs du XXe siècle, le 31 Mars 2016 à 17h 

Important Pair of Natural Pearl and Diamond Pendent Earclips, Cartier, Paris, 1949

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Lot 1732, Important Pair of Natural Pearl and Diamond Pendent Earclips, Cartier, Paris, 1949. Estimate 6,300,000 — 7,000,000 HKD (728,306 - 809,229 EUR). Photo Sotheby's.

Each suspending a drop-shaped white or grey natural pearl measuring approximately 14.65 - 15.65 x 16.50mm and 13.05 - 15.50 x 17.80mm, to the fan-shaped surmount set with circular-cut and baguette diamonds together weighing approximately 5.00 carats, mounted in platinum and 18 karat white gold, signed and numbered 01486, Circa 1949

Accompanied by SSEF report numbered 71772, dated 27 November 2013, stating that the two pearls are saltwater natural pearls, with no indications of artificial colour modification; also accompanied by an appendix letter stating that 'assembling a pair of ear-pendants with natural pearls of this size and quality is rare and exceptional.'
Further accompanied by a Cartier certificate of authenticity numbered GE2004-125 and dated 22 November 2004.

Also accompanied by a fitted box. 

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels & Jadeite, Hong Kong, 05 avr. 2016, 02:00 PM

A fine doucai floral bowl, Daoguang six-character seal mark in underglaze blue and of the period (1821-1850)

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A fine doucai floral bowl, Daoguang six-character seal mark in underglaze blue and of the period (1821-1850)

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Lot 106, A fine doucai floral bowl, Daoguang six-character seal mark in underglaze blue and of the period (1821-1850)Estimate HK$100,000 – HK$150,000 ($12,953 - $19,430). Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016.

The bowl is finely enamelled to the exterior with six stylised upright flower sprays encompassed by a floral scroll, below a band of trefoils against a yellow ground at the rim. The interior is decorated with a further floral spray encircled by a band of florettes and petals within arching trefoils. 6 in. (15.3 cm.) diam., box

Provenance: Sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 20 May 1986, lot 112

Christie's. THE PAVILION SALE - CHINESE CERAMICS AND WORKS OF ART, 5 April 2016, Hong Kong

A wucai 'dragon and phoenix' bowl, Daoguang six-character seal mark in underglaze blue and of the period (1821-1850)

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A wucai 'dragon and phoenix' bowl, Daoguang six-character seal mark in underglaze blue and of the period (1821-1850)

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Lot 107, wucai 'dragon and phoenix' bowl, Daoguang six-character seal mark in underglaze blue and of the period (1821-1850)Estimate HK$80,000 – HK$150,000 ($10,362- $19,430). Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2016.

The bowl is enamelled on the exterior with two scaly dragons in pursuit of a flaming pearl, alternating with descending long-tailed phoenix, all amidst meandering leafy scrolls. The interior is further decorated with a central medallion enclosing a dragon in pursuit of a flaming pearl. 5 3/4 in. (14.8 cm.) diam., box

Provenance: Sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 26 November 1980, lot 397

Christie's. THE PAVILION SALE - CHINESE CERAMICS AND WORKS OF ART, 5 April 2016, Hong Kong

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