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Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery explores pastorals, landscapes, and the Arcadian vision

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Jan Both (Dutch, 1618-1652), Landscape with Shepherds. Oil on canvas, 42-1/4" x 54-1/4". The Sullivan Collection, Peabody College, Vanderbilt University, 1979.0195P.

NASHVILLE, TENN.- This summer, the Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery explores how, for centuries, artists have rendered nature in a tranquil, idyllic form in Pastorals, Landscapes, and the Arcadian Vision, which features over fifty paintings and works on paper from the seventeenth to twentieth centuries. Pastorals, Landscapes, and the Arcadian Vision will remain on view through September 9, 2016. 

The mythologized Arcadia, which is a mountainous region in the Peloponnesian peninsula, emerged in the first century BCE when the Roman poet Virgil wrote the Eclogues and Georgics. These poems recreated Arcadia as a place of country life in its purest form, removed from the civilized city, where rustic shepherds subsist on the meat and milk of their herds. Virgil’s contemporary, Horace, wrote Ut Pictura Poesis, “as is poetry, so is painting,” inspiring generations to come about how these two artistic mediums work in tandem. A selection of poetry excerpts spanning several centuries is included to reinforce this relationship. 

Pastorals have often been created as a fiction for an educated, urban audience. Whether manifesting in poetry or in the visual arts, this genre helps the consumer envision a peaceful and harmonic world in contrast to an urban one of bustle and conflict. In painting, this reached a new height in the Italian Renaissance through works by Titian and Georgione, the latter of whom was particularly influenced by the Italian poet, Jacopo Sannazzaro’s Arcadia (1504). Vanderbilt’s holdings begin to tell the story through the seventeenth century Dutch Italianate painters and printmakers Jan Both and Nicolaes Berchem and with delightful, intimate etchings by the Dutch genre artist Adriaen van Ostade. All three of these artists’ works reflect the widely held contemporary view that nature should be improved upon in poetry and painting. 

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Théodore Rousseau, French (1812–1867). Landscape with Figures, 19th century. Oil on paper mounted on canvas, 7 1/2″ x 10″. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Joel Glassman and Thomas A. Glassman, B.A. 1971, 1984.030. 

The exhibition traces the steady popularity of landscapes in France through the work of Claudine Stella (1636–1697), Philippe Caresme (1734–1796), and Théodore Rouseeau (1812–1867). Additionally, there are two small woodcuts by Aristide Maillol (1861–1944) created as illustrations to Virgil’s Georgics and Eclogues. Paintings and prints by English and American artists are also included. While the dates of these landscapes span several centuries, the close connection between poetry and the visual arts is the thread that links them together. Thomas Nason’s Connecticut Pastoral, 1936, represents the longevity of this relationship, as Nason was one of Robert Frost’s primary illustrators in the early twentieth century. 

Pastorals, Landscapes, and the Arcadian Vision is organized by the Vanderbilt University Fine Arts Gallery and curated by Joseph S. Mella, director.

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Thomas Nason (American, 1889–1971), Connecticut Pastoral, 1936. Wood engraving, 3-1/4” x 4-1/4”. Dr. and Mrs. E. William Ewers Gift for Fine Art Fund Purchase.


The Maya: A transcendent exhibition at Peyton Wright Gallery highlights the late Classic Period

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William Frej, Tonina, 2015. Archival Chromogenic Silver Halide Print.

SANTA FE, NM.- Peyton Wright Gallery announces The Maya, a transcendent exhibition highlighting the late Classic Period through an extraordinary marriage of pre-Colombian artifacts and luminous black and white images of forgotten Mayan ruins captured by photographer William Frej. 

As a young adventurer, Mr. Frej passed through the Yucatan and was captivated by the majesty and mystery the Maya embodied through the colossal remains of their culture scattered throughout the jungle. Forty years later, after a life dedicated to the study of architecture and diplomatic service with its attending engagement with culture, he returned to the cradle of his inspiration. 

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William Frej, Labina, 2015. Archival Chromogenic Silver Halide Print.

Now a renowned photographer, he spent three years penetrating remote jungles and the forgetful gauze of time to document the wonders of ancient Mayan development in the Yucatan, Chiapas, Quintana Roo and Campeche. Obscured and consumed over the course of a millennium by the ravenous jungles of the Yucatan Peninsula and the Lacandon, many of the wonders captured anew by these living images have stood unvisited since Teobert Maler documented them in the late 19th century. 

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William Frej, Calakmul, 2015. Archival Chromogenic Silver Halide Print)

Frej transports us through compelling images that capture art as a built environment and culture manifest through an engineered devotion to gods, forgotten yet never lost. Sabacche, Chunchucmul, Pixoy and Balche are sites that stand as a silent witness to the vast enterprise and ultimate demise of the Maya. We invite you to accompany Frej on an extraordinary virtual tour of the ruins, a tour in which his vision is accompanied by prime examples of the highest aesthetic ceramic and sculptural achievements of these ancient people. 

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William Frej, Palenque, 2015. Archival Chromogenic Silver Halide Print. 

Moving through the galleries viewers will be transported by an intimate sense of connection to the impulse of the Maya to memorialize their experience of being in vignettes painted on clay and the promise of immortality carved in stone. Mayan craftsmen celebrated the human form in three dimensions across a variety of media. An extraordinary example of their artistry in stone is offered in the Head of a Dignitary. This object, whose authenticity was confirmed by Hasso von Winning in 1975, is a unique death portrait whose elegant headdress and ear spools declare status while a serene expression conveys a timeless air of exalted dignity.  

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William Frej, Santa Rosa Xtompak, 2015. Archival Chromogenic Silver Halide Print.

A significant dimension of the exhibition is devoted to a striking collection of Mayan cylinders. This grouping is part of a private holding that was assembled over several decades beginning in the late 1930s. In keeping with cultural traditions around the globe, Mayan ceramic objects were used in part as the backdrop for paintings depicting scenes of mundane daily life, elements of the natural world, and moments of extraordinary and unearthly import. Lords in elaborate costume await the coming of off screen vassals. Feathered gods sweep curvilinear skies in pursuit of prey both human and ethereal. As visitors leave the gallery they will take with them a sense of continuity common to the human experience. With a feeling of constancy conveyed by exposure to the world, these objects embody a deep breath of a world filled with mystery and majesty in concert with all of time.

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Anonymous-Mayan, Head of a Dignitary, 600 - 900. Stucco, 17 x 11 x 9 in. (43,2 x 27,9 x 22,9 cm.).

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Anonymous-Mayan, Cylinder Vessel600 - 1000. Earthenware with colored slips. 

BOGHOSSIAN at Masterpiece London 2016

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Natural pearls and diamonds bracelet from the Reverence CollectionPrice on request. Courtesy BOGH-ART.

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Yellow and white Kissing diamond earringsPrice on request. Courtesy BOGH-ART.

WALLACE CHAN at Masterpiece London 2016

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Wallace Chan, 'Damask Silk'. Created in 2016. DIF Diamond 54pcs 25.22ct. Trillion-cut Pink Tourmaline 124pcs 21.38ct. Fancy Colored Diamond, Pink Sapphire, White Agate. Price on request. Courtesy Wallace Chan.

Masterpiece London 2016. 30 june- 6 july. WALLACE CHAN. Stand D21Hong Kong, China. T   +852 2523 2788. E-mail catherineyu@wallace-chan.com - Website http://www.wallace-chan.com

CHATILA at Masterpiece London 2016

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Fancy Purplish Pink IF Pear Shape Diamond Ring, 8.18 Cts. Price on request. Courtesy Chatila.

Masterpiece London 2016. 30 june- 6 july. CHATILA. Stand A4222 Old Bond Street, London, WIS 4 PY, United Kingdom. T  +44 207 493 98 33 - M   +44 207 629 28 10 - E-mail marwan@chatila.com - Website http://www.chatila.com

VERDURA JEWELLERY at Masterpiece London 2016

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Fulco di VERDURA. 'Looped' earclips. Platinum and diamond. Price on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

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Fulco di VERDURA. 'Pebble' bracelets. Price on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

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Fulco di VERDURA. 'Curb-Link' bracelet and watch. Price on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

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Fulco di VERDURA. 'Stardust' cluster earclips. Moonstone, diamond and platinum. Price on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

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Fulco di VERDURA. 'Stardust' necklace. Moonstone, diamond and white gold. Price on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

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Fulco di VERDURA. 'Confetti' necklace. Price on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

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Fulco di VERDURA. 'Hyacint' bracelet. 18kt yellow gold, platinum, sapphire and diamond. Price on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

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Fulco di VERDURA. 'Cascade' earclips. Gold, aquamarine, emerald and tsavorite garnetPrice on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

Fulco di VERDURA, 'Fulco' Earclips

Fulco di VERDURA. 'Fulco' Earclips. In 18kt gold, enamel and gemstone. Price on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

Fulco di VERDURA, 18kt yellow gold, enamel and diamond 'Night and Day' cufflinks and shirt studs

Fulco di VERDURA, 18kt yellow gold, enamel and diamond 'Night and Day' cufflinks and shirt studs. Price on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

Fulco di VERDURA, 'Polka Dot' Rings in 18kt gold and gemstone

Fulco di VERDURA, 'Polka Dot' Rings in 18kt gold and gemstonePrice on request. Courtesy Verdura Jewellery

Masterpiece London 2016. 30 june- 6 july. VERDURA JEWELLERY. Stand A7Harry Fane, 13 Duke Street St James's, London, SW1Y 6DB, United Kingdom - info@hfane.com * Nico Landrigan, 745 5th Ave, Manhattan, New York, 10019, United States - info@verdura.com * E-mail info@hfane.com info@verdura.com - Website http://www.harryfane.com www.verdura.com

Claire Rosen, «Birds of a Feather»

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Claire Rosen, Gray Cockatiel, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Parakeet, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Peach Face Love Bird, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016 

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Claire Rosen, Blue Front Amazon Parrot, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Red Bellied Parrot, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016 

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Claire Rosen, White Faced Hurled Cockatiel,«Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Meyers Parrot, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Parakeet «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016 

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Claire Rosen, Blue and Gold Macaw, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016 

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Claire Rosen, Meyers Parrot, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016 

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Claire Rosen, Hyacint Macaw, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Dusky Pionus, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Red and Green Macaw, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

(Source Claire Rosen)

A small celadon glazed Yaozhou bowl with floral spray inside, China, Song dynasty (960-1279)


A pair of Qingbai bowls incised with flowers, China, Southern Song dynasty (1127-1279)

A rare Longquan lotus dish with the incised moon hare, China, Song dynasty (960-1279)

A Jun-glazed bowl, China, Yuan dynasty (1279-1368)

A large lobed and moulded celadon dish with incised floral decoration, China, Ming dynasty (1368-1644)

A magnificent Fahua jar, China, Ming dynasty (1368-1644)

Recent acquisitions of Dutch and Flemish drawings celebrated at the National Gallery of Art

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Jan van Huysum, Bouquet of Spring Flowers in a Terracotta Vase, 1720s, oiled charcoal and watercolor on laid paper; sheet: 39.6 x 30.7 cm (15 9/16 x 12 1/16 in.)National Gallery of Art, Washington, Pepita Milmore Memorial Fund, The Ahmanson Foundation Fund, Linda H. Kaufman Fund, and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Glickfield Fund.

WASHINGTON, DC.- Over the last decade, the National Gallery of Art has acquired an exquisite selection of mid-15th-to early 20th-century Dutch and Flemish drawings. Some 20 works—many on view for the first time—cover a range of genres and incorporate a variety of media. Recent Acquisitions of Dutch and Flemish Drawings will be on view in the West Building from July 3, 2016 through January 2, 2017. Highlights include a page from a 15th-century manuscript (c. 1442) with illustrations by Barthélemy van Eyck (active c. 1435–1470); a vibrant, full-color miniature of The Adoration of the Magi (mid-1520s) by Simon Bening (1483/1484– 1561); a unique large portrait drawing by Michael Sweerts (1618–1664); and two rare compositional studies by Gerrit van Honthorst (1590–1656). 

Acquiring Dutch and Flemish drawings made prior to 1600 as well as 18th- and 19th-century drawings has been of particular focus over the past decade,” said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art. “We are thankful for the kind generosity of several donors and unique opportunities that has allowed this area of the Gallery’s collection to grow in both richness and depth.” 

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Barthélemy van Eyck, Seven Famous Figures from Ancient History, c. 1442; pen and brown ink with watercolor, heightened with white, on vellum; overall: 31.4 x 20.1 cm (12 3/8 x 7 15/16 in.). National Gallery of Art, Washington, Woodner Collection, Gift of Andrea Woodner.

Recent Acquisitions of Dutch and Flemish Drawings encompasses landscapes, seascapes, portraits, still lifes, and history subjects that demonstrate the originality of Dutch and Flemish draftsmanship and its stylistic evolution. Key works by artists such as Maerten van Heemskerck (1498–1574), Hendrick Goltzius (1558–1617), Abraham Bloemaert (1564–1651), and Jan van Huysum (1682–1749) will be exhibited. In addition to eight works made prior to 1600, six 18th- and 19th- century drawings will be on view, including major works by Gaspar van Wittel (1652/1653–1736) and Johan Barthold Jongkind (1819–1891). The latest work in the exhibition is a powerful self-portrait from 1907 by Lodewijk Schelfhout (1881–1943). 

The exhibition is organized by Margaret Morgan Grasselli, curator and head of old master drawings, National Gallery of Art.

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Simon Bening, The Adoration of the Magi, mid-1520s; tempera heightened with gold on vellum mounted to wood, overall: 16.8 x 22.9 cm (6 5/8 x 9 in.). National Gallery of Art, Washington, Woodner Collection, Gift of Dian Woodner.

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Maerten van Heemskerck, Satan Challenges God to Remove his Protection from Job, 1562; pen and brown ink over traces of graphite on laid paper, incised for transfer, sheet: 19.2 x 24.8 cm (7 9/16 x 9 3/4 in.); mount: 28.5 x 37.8 cm (11 1/4 x 14 7/8 in.). National Gallery of Art, Washington, Joseph F. McCrindle Collection.

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Gerrit van Honthorst, Diana and Four Nymphs Receiving Gifts from a Satyr, c. 1630; pen and black ink with gray wash over black chalk, heightened with white gouache, on brown laid paper; sheet: 25 x 38.2 cm (9 13/16 x 15 1/16 in.). National Gallery of Art, Washington, Pepita Milmore Memorial Fund

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Michael Sweerts, Jan van den Enden, c. 1651, black chalk on laid paper; sheet: 53 x 36 cm (20 7/8 x 14 3/16 in.). National Gallery of Art, Washington, New Century Fund

A very rare blue and white lobed saucer dish painted with an Imperial dragon and Daoist symbols, Longqing mark and of the period


A small Chinese blue and white Kraak dish, Wanli period (1573-1619) and a Chinese blue and white dish, Kangxi

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A small Chinese blue and white Kraak dish , Wanli (1573-1619)

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Lot 166. A small Chinese blue and white Kraak dish, Wanli period (1573-1619), a Chinese blue and white dish, Kangxi period and a small Chinese blue and white bowl, 18th century. Est: £70–100. Sold for £200Photo Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions

the centre painted with a duck on a rock, 21cm diameter; and a Chinese blue and white dish, Kangxi, densely painted with foliage, 27cm diameter and a small Chinese blue and white bowl, 18th century, the exterior painted with a boy offering a scholar a gift, 10.3cm diameter (3); in nice condition with no cracks and only some very minor rim chips and some kiln glaze fritting to reverse; the Kangxi dish with 2cm haircrack otherwise good; the bowl with several small rim frits

Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions. Chinese Ceramics and Asian Works of Art, Tuesday 17 May 2016

Claire Rosen, «Birds of a Feather» (2)

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Claire Rosen, Common Parakeet, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Parakeet, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Canary Wing Bee, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Peach-Faced Lovebird, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Blue and Gold Macaw, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Rainbow Laurie, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Red-Billed Toucan, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Parakeet, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Lutino Cockatiel, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Blue-Eyed Triton Cockatoo, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

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Claire Rosen, Moluccan Cockatoo, «Birds of a Feather» © Claire Rosen 2016

(Source Claire Rosen)

A pair of large Chinese Export 'Pronk' arbour dishes, early Qianlong Period, circa 1738-1740

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A pair of large Chinese Export 'Pronk' arbour dishes, early Qianlong Period, circa 1738-1740

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Lot 169. A pair of large Chinese Export 'Pronk' arbour dishes, early Qianlong Period, circa 1738-1740. Est: £1000–1500. Sold for £3000Photo Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions

decorated after the Dutch artist Cornelis Pronk's design, with the topiary garden scene, the border with cartouches of moths, butterflies, flowers and fruit, the reverse with an iron-red and purple lambrequin border, 32cm diameter, ebonised frames (2); one dish with two large pieces damaged and re-stuck at 6pm on rim overall size of two pieces approximately 8cm x 4cm.; both with some wear to enamels and gilding; surface scratches and some wear to gilding and faces and some staining.

Cornelis Pronk (1691-1754), was commissioned by directors of the Dutch East India Company in 1734 to produce designs to be transferred on to Chinese porcelain. C.J.A. Jorg identifies the arbour as Cornelis Pronk's fourth and last official design (drawn in 1737) for the Dutch East India Co., noting that "[because of the high cost of these special patterns]…they ordered a small quantity…" and estimates that just three large arbour dinner services were made in enamel colours (Pronk Porcelain , pp 36-37). 

ProvenanceA Private Family Collection.

Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions. Chinese Ceramics and Asian Works of Art, Tuesday 17 May 2016

A Chinese Famille Verte hexagonal bowl, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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A Chinese Famille Verte hexagonal bowl, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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Lot 184. A Chinese Famille Verte hexagonal bowl, Kangxi period (1662-1722). Est: £1500–1800. Sold for £4700Photo Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions

the deep sides decorated with six scenes from the Romance of Western Chamber (Xixiangji ), the interior with an landscape and iron-red, mauve, yellow and green border, underglaze blur vase mark to base, 19cm diameter; rim chips polished in several areas to upper surface

Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions. Chinese Ceramics and Asian Works of Art, Tuesday 17 May 2016

A Chinese Famille Verte bottle vase , probably Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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Lot 187. A Chinese Famille Verte bottle vase , probably Kangxi period (1662-1722). Est: £500–800. Sold for £2200Photo Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions

painted in iron-red, shades of green, grey-purple and gilt with aquatic and other flowers, brown-line rim, gilded details, 25cm high; minor wear but in very good condition

Provenance: By descent through the Fludyer Family, finally to Sir Arthur John Fludyer, 5th and last baronet, who died childless in 1922 and then to his sister Katherine who married Henry Randolph Finch of the Croft, Manton, second son of George Finch, Burley-on-the-Hill, Rutland and by descent. 

Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions. Chinese Ceramics and Asian Works of Art, Tuesday 17 May 2016

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