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Fancy Deep Brownish Greenish Yellow Diamond, Conch Pearl, Gem Set and Diamond Brooch, Michael Youssoufian

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Lot 9185. Fancy Deep Brownish Greenish Yellow Diamond, Conch Pearl, Gem Set and Diamond Brooch, Michael Youssoufian. Estimate 280,000 — 360,000 HKDPhoto: Sotheby's. 

Of floral design, centring upon a cut-cornered square modified brilliant-cut fancy deep brownish greenish yellow diamond weighing 0.93 carat, surrounded by stamens set with diamonds of yellow tint, to the conch pearl petals framed by coloured sapphires, rubies and diamonds, completed by the diamond-set stem and pear-shaped emerald leaves, mounted in 18 karat white, yellow and pink gold, signed MY, with Michael Youssoufian maker's mark, pouch stamped M.Y.

Accompanied by GIA report numbered 11055835, dated 2 March 2000, stating that the 0.93 carat diamond is natural, Fancy Deep Brownish Greenish Yellow Colour; GIA further commented that 'the colour of this stone changes temporarily when gently heated, or when left in darkness for a period of time and is known in the trade as "CHAMELEON"'. Please note that the report is more than (10) years old and might require an update.

Sotheby's. Important Jewels and Jadeite, Hong Kong, 12 Oct 2017, 02:00 PM

Quatre masques de théâtre Nô, Japon, époque d’Edo chez Arts d'Asie chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 31 octobre 2017

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Lot 229. Masque de théâtre Nô, Japon, époque d’Edo. Estimation: 2 000 € / 4 000 €. Photo Cornette de Saint Cyr

Bois, enduits et pigments. H. 20 cm 
Superbe masque de la famille caractères masculins Otoko, figurant très probablement Dôji, garçon pur et innocent qui symboliserait la jeunesse éternelle. La surface est recouverte d’un traitement de type « coquille d’œuf ». Petits accidents visibles. 
Inscription ou signature au dos. 

Provenance- Collection privée Belge 
- Acquis de la galerie Alain Tamenne (Bruxelles) 

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Lot 230. Masque de théâtre Nô, Japon, époque d’Edo. Estimation: 2 000 € / 4 000 €. Photo Cornette de Saint Cyr

Bois, enduits et pigments. H. 21 cm 
Beau masque de la famille caractères masculins Otoko, figurant Kasshiki, jeune garçon s’occupant des repas dans les sanctuaires Zen, identifiable à la mèche de cheveux centrale retombant sur son front.

Provenance : - Collection privée Belge 
- Accompagné d’u certificat dauthenticitéémis par Gisèle Croës (Bruxelles) en date du 14 mars 1988

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Lot 231. Masque de théâtre Nô, Japon, époque d’Edo. Estimation: 2 000 € / 4 000 €. Photo Cornette de Saint Cyr

Bois, enduits et pigments. H. 21,5 cm 
Très beau masque de la famille caractères féminins Onna, figurant très probablement Shiro Shakumi, femme d’âge moyen à qui la vie aurait enseigné tous les aléas de l’existence, chagrins, douleurs et joies. Ses dents sont traditionnellement noircies. Petits accidents visibles. 
Marque, inscription et / ou signature au dos. 

Provenance : - Collection privée Belge 
- Acquis de la galerie Alain Tamenne (Bruxelles) le 23 décembre 1977

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Lot 232. Masque de théâtre Nô, Japon, époque d’Edo. Estimation: 2 000 € / 4 000 €. Photo Cornette de Saint Cyr

Bois, enduits et pigments. H. 21 cm 
Masque au visage émacié et ridé de la catégorie des personnes âgées malicieuses Jô, figurant très probablement Sankô Jô, dérivé du nom d’un moine sculpteur spécialisé dans cette typologie. 

Provenance- Collection privée Belge 
- Acquis de la galerie Alain Tamenne (Bruxelles) le 14 juin 1975

Arts d'Asie chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 75008 Paris, le 31 Octobre 2017 à 14h30. Expert : Cabinet Daffos-Estournel. Tel. : +33 6 09 22 55 13.

Three serpent enamel and ruby necklace, mid 19th century

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Lot 22. Enamel and ruby necklace, mid 19th century. Estimate 50,000 — 70,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

Modelled as a snake, the fully articulated body applied with green, blue, yellow, black and white enamel, the eyes collet-set with circular-cut rubies, length approximately 540mm 

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Lot 23. Enamel and ruby necklace, mid 19th century. Estimate 50,000 — 70,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

Modelled as a snake, the fully articulated body applied with black and white enamel, the eyes collet-set with circular-cut rubies, length approximately 520mm.

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Lot 24. Enamel and ruby necklace, mid 19th century. Estimate 60,000 — 80,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

Modelled as a snake, the fully articulated body applied with black and white enamel, the eyes collet-set with circular-cut rubies, length approximately 675mm.

Note: The serpent is one of the oldest and most widespread mythological symbols, and has been both venerated and feared since antiquity. Through the act of shedding its skin, it is symbolic of immortality and rebirth, while the image of the serpent biting its tail – known as the ouroboros – has become a symbol of cyclic renewal and resurrection, and has been widely used in the decorative arts.

Snake jewels came to particular prominence in the second quarter of the 19th century, when Queen Victoria herself wore a coiled snake bracelet for her first opening of Parliament in 1837, and later a snake ring set with emeralds, presented to her by Prince Albert as a symbol of their engagement in 1840.

The present three works are notable for their highly naturalistic articulation and exquisite enamelling, which they possibly owe to a number of specialised workshops based in Geneva, which became the centre of the painted enamel industry in the early 19th century. 

Cf.: Geoffrey Munn, The Triumph of Love, Jewelry 1530-1930, Thames & Hudson Ltd. London, 1993, pg. 64, for a closely comparable example, attributed to the Geneva enamel workshops.

Sotheby's. S. J. Phillips: A Bond Street Legacy, London, 18 oct. 2017, 12:00 PM

H'mong and Red Dao children of Lao Cài, Vietnam

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Photographer : Anis Nassar / Selection and retouch : Karim Nassar

Statue féminine Senufo, Côte-d’Ivoire

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Lot 20. Statue féminine Senufo, Côte-d’Ivoire. Estimation : 10 000 € / 15 000 €. Photo: Cornette de Saint Cyr

Bois. H. 91 cm. 

Rare et puissante statue féminine debout. On notera la très belle structure du corps incurvé aux longs bras repliés, les mains venant reposer sur le haut des cuisses. Le visage présente une puissante projection vers l’avant avec une bouche relevée dévoilant des dents. Cette importante sculpture est caractéristique de la production d’un atelier dont seulement quelques œuvres sont recensées. Anciens accidents et manques visibles au niveau des pieds. 

Provenance- Ancienne collection Suisse 
- Collection privée Européenne
 

Références bibliographiques- B. Gottschalk : «Sénoufo : «Massa et les statues du Poro» fig 210 pp 163 et 164 
- Susan Elisabeth Gagliardi : «Senufo sans frontières : La dynamique des arts et des identités en Afrique de l'ouest» 2015 maternité n° 109

Arts Tribal chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 75008 Paris, le 31 Octobre 2017 à 14h30. Expert : Cabinet Daffos-Estournel. Tel. : +33 6 09 22 55 13 – www.aaoarts.com

Statue lü me Dan, Côte-d’Ivoire

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Lot 34. Statue lü me Dan, Côte-d’IvoireEstimation : 10 000 € / 15 000 €. Photo: Cornette de Saint Cyr

Bois. H. 73 cm

Les sculptures anthropomorphes Dan sont d’une grande rareté, et constituent de fait un corpus très étroit. Elles sont affublées du nom vernaculaire de lü me, qui voudrait simplement dire « personnage en bois » . Ces sculptures qui auraient été créées comme de simples œuvres d’art dans le seul but d’honorer la beauté des femmes de chefs importants étaient commanditées par ces derniers aux meilleurs sculpteurs locaux et conservées dans les trésors de chefferies, seulement exhibées en de rares occasions pour accroitre le prestige de leurs détenteurs. 

Le style général très particulier de cette belle sculpture, position des jambes, des bras et des mains, ainsi que la ligne verticale frontale, les sourcils hachurés, la bouche dévoilant des dents implantées, et surtout les riches scarifications recouvrant la poitrine et l’abdomen renvoient directement aux quelques œuvres attribuées au grand maître sculpteur Zlan (Sran) de Belewale décédé en 1960.

S’il est toujours fort délicat d’attribuer avec certitude une œuvre à un maître africain, on peut toutefois avancer avec une quasi certitude que cette sculpture est au moins l’œuvre d’un artiste formé dans son atelier. 

La surface est recouverte d’une épaisse peinture noire, et les bords antérieurs des deux coques de la coiffure légèrement échancrés laissaient autrefois retomber des nattes postiches.  

Provenance : - Ancienne collection Française 
- Collection privée Européenne. 

Références bibliographiques : - H. Himmelheber, «Negerkunst», 1960, p. 171 
- Fischer & Himmelheber: «Die Kunst der Dan» Rietberg Museum Zurich 1976

Arts Tribal chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 75008 Paris, le 31 Octobre 2017 à 14h30. Expert : Cabinet Daffos-Estournel. Tel. : +33 6 09 22 55 13 – www.aaoarts.com

Grand fétiche Songye, R.D. du Congo

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Lot 42. Grand fétiche Songye, R.D. du CongoEstimation : 8 000 € / 12 000 €. Photo: Cornette de Saint Cyr

Bois, fibres, cornes… H. 77 cm. 

Le personnage masculin est traditionnellement représenté debout, les mains disposées de part et d’autre d’un ombilic largement creusé, probablement pour abriter une charge magique. La têteest surmontée de pièces métalliques et de deux cornes émergeant des cavités creusées au sommet du crâne. Des touffes de fibres végétales sortent des narines, et des clous de métal à grosses têtes sont fichés aux commissures des lèvres. Des cavités ont été creusées sur l’avant du socle et à l’arrière de la tête pour abriter des substances magiques.  

On notera le visage stylisé suivant les canons classiques Songye mais laissant toutefois clairement apparaître un rare caractère naturaliste.  

Provenance : - Ancienne collection Américaine 
- Collection privée Européenne. 

Références bibliographiques : - F. Neyt : «La redoutable statuaire Songye d’Afrique Centrale» Fonds Mercator 2009

Arts Tribal chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 75008 Paris, le 31 Octobre 2017 à 14h30. Expert : Cabinet Daffos-Estournel. Tel. : +33 6 09 22 55 13 – www.aaoarts.com

An outstanding and extremely rare inscribed 'shanmu''dragon' raft, signed Meigen, Qing dynasty, Guangxu period

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Lot 3007. An outstanding and extremely rare inscribed 'shanmu''dragon' raft, signed Meigen, Qing dynasty, Guangxu period (1875-1908), 31.7 cm, 12 1/2  inEstimate 2,000,000 — 3,000,000 HKD. Lot sold 2,500,000 HKD. Photo: Sotheby's.

the natural branch oriented horizontally to resemble a log raft with protrusions extending upwards, one side carved with a two-character inscription reading long cha ('dragon raft') followed by Jilou ('Odds and Ends Studio'), the reverse densely carved with a lengthy inscription referring to the source of the branch and eulogising its shape, terminating with the signature Meigen, the wood with an attractive fluid grain and smoothly patinated to a warm reddish-brown colour, wood stand.

ExhibitedGerald Tsang and Hugh Moss, Arts from the Scholar's Studio, Fung Ping Shan Museum, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, 1986, cat. no. 62.
Jean de Loisy and Alain Thuleau, La Beauté, Avignon, 2000, p. 238.

NoteNaturally gnarled and wrinkled and of pleasing vivacious form, the ‘dragon’ raft encapsulates a story. It was reputedly once a section of a towering shan tree in front of the temple of the legendary Emperor Shun that, having witnessed the passage of time and the change of seasons, was crudely severed when the local official destroyed the woods. Having been saved by a scholar and later cherished by a monk who decorated it with an inscription, the present log manifests its erstwhile owner’s reverence for the ancient ruler, his resentment over the destruction of the woods and his innocent pleasure derived from scholarly objects. Having been transformed from a guardian tree to a poetic object perfect for a scholar’s desk, the ‘dragon’ raft recalls ancient tales and provides inspiration.

The log is incised in clerical script with a long inscription, which can be translated as: 

The whereabouts of Shun’s tomb on the Nine Doubts Mountain has been uncertain for ages, but shan trees in front of the Temple of Shun presented a magnificent towering sight, cloaking the place with a sense of the mysterious and divine. Woodcutting was thus prohibited, so there they flourished like sweet pear trees providing a place to stop and rest. During the Guangxu period of our present dynasty the district magistrate, on the pretext that wind would topple them, had all the trees cut down—becoming like Cavalry Commander Huan in doing so.1 And they, whose heads had once reached into the clouds so that they made one rest one’s staff and become stirred to strong emotion, chanced to leave behind a few small fragments of branches, which all in the world treasured. Liu Zhun, a retired scholar from Lingdao, gave me one such fragment that he had saved. Its shape is so irregular and knobby, curving like a dragon at play, that it deserves to be elegantly embellished with a title and inscription. Now today as my thoughts float free on the sea and my spirit roams along Yu’s tour routes of inspection, I make this clear to future generations: spoil not my intention and rashly ridicule this object of enjoyment. The inscription states: Was this cut down to serve as a chronological record? Or was it done to provide something on which to ride up to Heaven? Aha! Aha! Or was it because Shun really is immortal?

It has long been believed that the burial place of Emperor Shun, who supposedly ruled in the later part of the third millennium BC, is located on Jiuyishan (‘Nine doubts mountain’) in the south of Hunan province. This legend has been well recorded long before the first dynasty. One early text is Shanhaijing [Classic of mountains and sea] compiled between the early Warring States period (475-221 BC) and the early Han dynasty (475 BC-9 AD); see section Haijing [Classic of sea], juan 13: Haineijing. According to a later classic, Shuijing zhu [Commentary on the Water Classic] by Li Daoyuan in the late Northern Wei dynasty, Jiuyishan is surrounded by nine similar peaks, all craggy and crooked, confusing the visitors, and hence the name ‘Nine doubts’. It is said that there were temples with stone stelae devoted to Emperor Shun on Jiuyishan, for it is where he was said to be buried.

Under ‘Shunmiao [Temple of Shun]’ in the 1796 version of Jiuyishan ji [Record of Nine Doubt Mountain], it is mentioned that the shan trees outside of the Temple of Shun appeared to have lived for centuries, and poets from Tang and Ming dynasty have written repeatedly about the shan trees in the area. The author says in a later chapter that 15 shan trees flanked the Temple of Shun, and adds “They are the oldest and the largest, with thick green branches and leaves. At night, lights can be seen on these trees, echoing the saying that they emit ‘heavenly lamps’ in the evening.” The present log was once part of an old tall tree, probably similar to those mentioned in the ancient literature, and beamed ‘heavenly lamps’ through the darkness of the nights.

According to the signature, the inscription was written by Du Meigen, a late-Qing dynasty monk. He was a calligrapher, painter and seal carver, native of Hezhou (present-day Hexian, Anhui), and lived in the Sanmei’an (‘Samādhi [Total Absorption] Hermitage’) in Wuhu, Anhui (see Hezhou ji [Record of Hezhou], included in Yu Jianhua, Zhongguo Meishujia Renming Cidian [Encyclopedia of Chinese artists]Shanghai, 1987, p. 904). Named after the Buddhist teaching of meditative absorption, Sanmei’an was built as early as the Ming dynasty. Poet Shi Runzhang (1618-1683) from Xuancheng, who had lived in Wuhu, wrote a poem on the hermitage, mentioning the monks residing there. Despite a lack of historical documentation on Du Meigen and the lack of any other surviving works, the inscription on the present piece is a literal portrait of the monk, giving us a glimpse to his love of nature, appreciation of scholarly objects and boundless imagination.

1 Huan Sima [Cavalry Commander Huan] features in the story behind the proverbial saying yan ji chiyu (‘Disaster reaches fish in the pond’ or ‘Disaster is visited on innocent people’). It is believed that Cavalry Commander Huan of the state of Song possessed a precious pearl. He committed a serious offense and fled the state.  When the king dispatched someone to ask where the pearl was, Huan said, ‘I threw it into the pond’. On hearing this, the king had the pond drained to find it, but it was not recovered, and the fish all died as a result”. Just as the fish died because of Huan (who in his greed, had surely lied and kept the pearl), the trees died because of the greedy magistrate, who lied about his reason for cutting them down. For details, see Lü Buwei (290-236 BC), shi chunqiu [Spring and Autumn Annals of Master Lü]. 

Sotheby's. Water, Pine and Stone Retreat Collection – Treasures, Hong Kong, 03 Oct 2017


A superbly carved bamboo-root 'Pine tree' waterpot, attributed to Zhu He, Jiading School, Late Ming dynasty

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Lot 3005. A superbly carved bamboo-root 'Pine tree' waterpot, attributed to Zhu He, Jiading School, Late Ming dynasty, l. 6.5 cm, 2 1/2  in. Estimate 400,000 — 600,000 HKD. Lot sold 1,625,000 HKD. Photo: Sotheby's.

delicately carved as a hollowed-out trunk section of a burled pine tree, the exterior further well rendered in openwork with gnarled branches bearing clusters of pine needles, the stippled grained surface of a dark reddish-brown colour, wood stand.

ProvenanceBluett & Sons Ltd, London, June 1968.

ExhibitedIp Yee and Laurence C.S. Tam, Chinese Bamboo Carving, pt. 1, Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong, 1978, no. 7 and col. pl. 4 (first from the left).
Gerald Tsang and Hugh Moss, Arts from the Scholar's Studio, Fung Ping Shan Museum, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, 1986, cat. no. 79.

NoteExquisitely carved in the round with openwork, this bamboo-root waterpot is realistically modelled to form a gnarled trunk with bark openings under dense layers of pine needles. With its delicate form and naturalistic subject matter, the waterpot would have been used on a scholar’s desk to give inspiration and pleasure while its owner meditated on aspects of life and nature. It is aesthetically pleasing and also small enough to be held in one’s palm.

The composition of the vigorous branches and lively needles is completed with the gnarls and openings of the bark, subtly revealing the age of the tree, illustrating its symbolism of longevity. In terms of carving style, the present piece evokes that of the famous bamboo brushpot signed by Zhu He in the collection of the Nanjing Museum. The Nanjing brushpot, also carved in high relief as a pine tree trunk, detailed with similar gnarls and openings, together with a pair of cranes as well as the Three Friends of Winter, is incised with a long inscription and dated to 1511. The famous Nanjing brushpot has been repeatedly published, for example, in Wang Shixiang and Wan-go Weng, Bamboo Carving of China, New York, 1983, p. 19, figs 5, 5a and 5b and Literati Spirit: Art of Chinese Bamboo Carving, Shanghai, 2012, cat. no. 001. Although without a signature, the present waterpot from the late Ming dynasty is clearly carved in the style of Zhu He.  

Zhu He (ca. 1497-ca. 1550), zi Zhiming, hao Songlin, was from a family that originated from Anhui but later moved to the Jiading district in Jiangsu. Zhu was a trained seal carver, but also acquired general carving techniques from his family. He was said to “have carved small playthings such as brushpots, perfumiers, cups and waterpots”. In spite of the rarity of objects attributable to Zhu, he is recognised for his exquisite carving and considered to be the pioneer who laid the keystone of the Jiading School of bamboo carving.

See a small bamboo waterpot carved in a comparable style with high-relief flowering prunus, from the Collection of King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden, exhibited in Chinese Art from the collection of H. M. King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden, British Museum, London, 1972, cat. no. 179. Its mouth-rim is similarly modelled to imitate a natural opening of the bark with a wrinkled rim.

Sotheby's. Water, Pine and Stone Retreat Collection – Treasures, Hong Kong, 03 Oct 2017

A purple 'duan''Mi Fu's treasure' inkstone with inscribed zitan base and cover, Qing dynasty

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Lot 3003. A purple 'duan''Mi Fu's treasure' inkstone with inscribed zitan base and cover, Qing dynasty, inkstone 8.1 cm, 3 1/8  in., album 23.5 by 16.7 cm, 9 1/4  by 6 1/2  in. Estimate 700,000 — 900,000 HKD. Lot sold 1,500,000 HKD. Photo: Sotheby's.

the inkstone of irregular trapezoidal form, with a slightly sloped recessed bell-shaped inkwell below a thin waterpool, framed by two edges of russet-brown 'skin', the top of the zitan cover carved with a clerical inscription eulogising the inkstone as being potentially Mi Fu's treasure and signed Yin Shubai in the calligraphy of Zhang Tingji, together with an album dedicated to the inkstone and decorated in ink and colours on paper between two polychrome brocade panels, the cover with a paper title panel translating to 'Painting of Critiquing an Inkstone, with Prunus Blossoms and a Bright Moon at the Half Window Studio, Inscribed for Yanchi [Mad about Inkstones] by Tienian', the first page of the album with a second inscribed title panel translating to 'An Album for the Personal Appreciation of the Master of the Green Banana-Leaf Hall', dated to the seventh month of the autumn of the bingshen year (1836) and signed Baoling, followed by a red seal mark reading Qindong, and a collector's seal beneath the panel, followed by two blank gold-flecked double-pages, the next double-page with mounted ink rubbings of the inkstone between its zitan base and cover, the following double-page painted on the right leaf with an inkstone between four seal marks, the left with four sets of inscriptions, three in appreciation of the inkstone, the next double-page with a painting and a long poem by Jiang Baoling documenting the viewing of inkstones in Tao's collection at the latter's studio ('Green Banana Leaf Lodge'), signed by Jiang Baoling, followed by two seals of the artist and another collector's seal, the following four double-pages with additions in ink and water-colours by the Master of the Water, Pine and Stone Retreat, comprising seven views of the inkstone and an inscription indicating that the inkstone "can move on as it should" after being in his collection for three decades, further accompanied with five seals of the artist, zhuxu laoren ('old man as empty inside as bamboo'), yiqi ru yun ('spirit as high as the clouds'), yangshi xianren ('an idler who cherishes stones), Shuisongshi shanfang (Water, Pine and Stone Retreat) and mozhe buxiu ('let ink be my immortality')

Inscription by the Master of the Water, Pine and Stone Retreat:

For thirty years I have frequently stepped back in time to join the friends of the inkstone on a moonlit night in the Half Window Studio, the scent of prunus blossoms in one nostril and ink in the other.  Tonight despite the clouds the moon shines again and the subtle scent of blossom sits on the breeze of my memory as I grind ink upon it for the last time to inscribe these little likenesses of the stone.

It has been in many collections over the centuries, the album and the accompanying painting by Qindong recording only a few.    

Now it is time to [?] its three decades in my studio then cut my love for it so it can move on as it should.

Treasures such as these last far longer than fragile life and carry with them so much of the past that remains important for the future.  We don’t own them, they merely soujourn a while.  What pleasant company this little companion has been.

Inscribed by the Master of the Water, Pine and Stone Retreat at the Garden at the Edge of the Universe in the summer, 2017.

Provenance: Collection of Tao Guan (1794-1849) and Wu Xiushu (1811-1873).
Collection of Xu Xiaopu (1887-1959).
Collection of Li Hongqiu (1899-1978).
Christie's Hong Kong, 13th January 1987, lot 253.

Literature: Li Hongqiu, Jianhualou shuhua lu [Jianhualou records of calligraphy and paintings], vol. 2, Taipei, 1971.
Zhongguo gudai minghua xuanji
 [Selected Works by Eminent Chinese Painters of the Past], National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1977, p. 55.

NoteMinimally carved from a purple duan stone pebble, the form of the current inkstone vaguely adopts a classic bell shape, with the central plain slightly sloped before subtly joining the recessed well. Retaining part of the original rugged russet-brown skin, the inkstone is reminiscent of a natural pebble. It fits as a practical utensil on a scholar’s desk, a tactile object for one’s palm, as well as an appropriate decoration inciting simplicity and modesty.

Inkstones of humble forms evoking simplicity, such as the current piece, are timeless, and have very likely been treasured by inkstone lovers throughout the ages. Should the legendary inkstone connoisseur and collector Mi Fu (1051-1107) have encountered such a charming inkstone of this unassuming yet fine quality, he would likely have admired its simplicity. Mi Fu, zi Yuanzhang, was a celebrated Song painter and calligrapher renowned for his intensity and fluidity of his writing, especially in running script. Mi Fu’s landscape paintings, although influenced by Wang Xianzhi (344-386), demonstrate a distinctive style unique in its own right. Mi was known to be a discerning connoisseur and collector of ancient bronzes, scholar’s rocks and inkstones. It is recorded that the famous Song poet Su Shi (1037-1101), also a connoisseur of inkstones, borrowed a purple-gold inkstone from Mi Fu’s collection and asked his son to bury the inkstone with him upon his death. Shocked by Su’s death as well as the burial plan, Mi wrote the letter On a Purple-gold Inkstone, urging the return of his prized inkstone. The letter is now preserved in the collection of the National Palace Museum, Taipei.

Zhang Tingji (1768-1848) admired the present inkstone so much that he envisioned Mi Fu’s potential excitement if he had seen the present inkstone, hence wrote a poetic inscription on the zitan cover. Zhang Tingji from Jiaxing, Zhejiang, originally named Rulin, zi Shun’an, Shuozhou and Zuotian, hao Shuwei, called himself Meishou laoren (‘Long-lived old fellow’) in his later years. He followed Mi Fu’s style of calligraphy, thus also calling himself Haiyue an menxia dizi (‘Disciple of the Studio of Oceans and Mountains’). Zhang passed the provincial exam with the highest honours in 1798, but never advanced higher in the civil examination system. A poet who excelled also at authenticating seal carvings, he collected ancient bronzes, stone tables, calligraphy and paintings, as well as a calligrapher noted for his seal and clerical script and who excelled at regular and cursive scripts.  His poetry and prose were published as the Guixintang ji [Collection from the Cassia Fragrance Hall]. It was said that Zhang was recognised by Ruan Yuan for his talents. Ruan was in charge of the Department of Education in Zhejiang. 

Thirteen inkstones in the collection of Zhang Tingji, including two of similar form later gifted to his sons, are published in his book Qingyige suo cang guqiwu wen [Inscriptions of the ancient objects in the collection of Qingyige]. Zhang also mentioned in the book that he had copied an inkstone based on a rubbing, see vol. 10. For an inkstone inscribed by Zhang Tingji in 1844, see Lanqian shanguan mingyan mulu [Catalogue of famous inkstones in the Thousand Orchids Mountain Establishment], National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1987, no. 63.

According to the inscription on the cover, it was engraved by Yin Shubai (1769-1847), zi Manqing, hao Yunlou (‘cloud chamber’), Xichou sangzhe (‘west field mulberry picker’) and later in life Nenyun (‘delicate cloud’), studio name Yiduolu (‘Hut of One Superfluous’), a gongsheng (tribute student) from Xiushui (modern day Jiaxing, Zhejiang), but participated no higher in the civil examination system. A noted calligrapher and painter and particularly skilled at small, still-life subjects, Yin liked to paint vegetables and fruit in his old age. Also adept at bamboo carving, he was noted for carving hundreds of marvelous regular-script characters on fan frames, and his name was recorded by Chu Deyi in Zhuren xulu [Sequel to record of bamboo carvers]. Among the few books he published were his collected verse Yiduolu shichao [Draft of poetry from the Hut of One Superfluous] and Zhuke lu [Record of bamboo carvings].

The inkstone used to belong to Wu Xiushu (1811-1873), zi Yuzhi (‘jade branch’), hao Lanqing (‘indolent darling’), from Wujiang. Noted for her ink paintings of orchids and poems, she was the wife of Tao Guan (1794-1849). Tao, zi Meishi, haoMeiruo and Chuyun (‘hoes clouds’), was a native of Xiushui (present day Jiaxing, Zhejiang). He was the eldest son of Tao Leshan, from whom he learned painting, poetry and prose. Tao Guan also excelled at seal carving and often discussed about paintings with his brother-in-law Ji Danshi. Tao was particularly noted for his plum blossoms and rocks paintings in the style of the eighteenth-century Yangzhou artist Jin Nong (1687-1763). His poems, well known for their restraint and subtlety, were published as the Lujiao shanguan ji [Collection from Green Banana Leaf Lodge], named after his studio, behind which located the Banchuang Mingyue Meihua shi (‘Half a Window Filled with Moontlight Prunus Blossoms Studio’), said to be the studio of Wu Xiushu where she wrote her poetry.

In 1832, according to the inscription, Tao asked Jiang Baoling (1781-1840) to paint and inscribe for the accompanying album. Jiang, zi Ziyan, Youyun, hao Xiazhu (‘bamboo assimilating rosy clouds’) and Qindong Yishi (‘Unofficial Historian of Qindong’), was a commoner scholar without gentry status, hailing from Zhaowen (present-day Changshu, Jiangsu). At about the age of 25, Jiang began an itinerant life, living for a time in Suzhou, Huzhou, Hangzhou, Jiaxing, and finally Shanghai. He was a noted poet, and landscape painter, particularly famous for his small, still-life subjects, always inscribed with poetry.

Mentioned in the inscription to the painting of the moonlit gathering under the plum-blossoms are Tao’s brother-in-law Ji Danshi (1783-1846) and his cousin Ji Guangxin (1803-1860). Ji Danshi, originally called Wei before renaming as Fen, ziXiaoyu, hao Danshi, was the second son of Ji Nan (1760-1834) and from Xiushui (present day Jiaxing, Zhejiang). Ji Danshi was a passionate collector and noted connoisseur. He studied all kinds of painting subjects, including landscape, flowers and birds and figure painting, but he was considered best at the flower-and-bird genre. Ji Guangxin, nephew of Ji Nan, also from Xiushui, zi Xibai, selected the hao Ertian (‘two fields’) to pay homage to Shen Zhou (1427-1509) whose hao was Shitian (‘field of stones’), and Yun Shouping (1633-1690) whose hao was Nantian (‘Southern field’). He excelled in the theory of painting although he did not paint a great deal himself, but when he did so, his paintings were considered vibrant and surprisingly good. He was also a knowledgeable connoisseur, especially of paintings and calligraphy. For an inkstone inscribed by Ji Guangxin and signed, in a seal, Ertian, see Lanqian shanguan mingyan muluop.cit., no. 70.

The title slip bears the name Tienian, probably the signature of Fu Zhu (1886-1947). Fu, zi Tienian, hao Guachang, from Hengyang, Hunan, but lived in Shanghai in his later years, sometimes signed his works Xiancun jushi (‘idle retired scholar’). A prolific calligrapher and painter, in painting he emulated Xu Wei (1521-1593) and Chen Daofu (1483-1544), and his calligrpahy synthesised the styles of Chu Suiliang (597-658) and Mi Fu (1051-1107).

The collectors’ seals verified that the album was once in the collection of Xu Xiaopu (1887-1959). Xu, originally named Fang and called himself Yanchi (‘mad about inkstones’), was a famed Chinese pediatrician in Shanghai and renowned collector of the 20th century. Among his collection was a special inkstone Wuyun shuangxin yan (‘five clouds and twin stars inkstone’), which Xu treasured highly and even named his studio after. The inkstone, unfortunately now lost, was recorded in the form of a rubbing, compiled together with paintings by various early-twentieth century artists as an album, formerly in the Water, Pine and Stone Retreat Collection, published in Escape from the Dusty World. Chinese Paintings and Literati Works of Art, Sydney L. Moss Ltd, London, 1999, cat. no. 15, and now in the collection of the Minneapolis Museum, also partially illustrated by Robert D. Jacobsen, Appreciating China, Minneapolis, 2002, cat. no. 169.

The present lot later entered the collection of acclaimed collector Li Hung-ch’iu (also Li Hongqiu, 1899-1978), a native of Liuyang, Hunan. He was the executive of various banks and trusts, the president and general manager of the World Book Company, later moved to Taiwan and founded the publishing house Dazhong shuju.  

Apart from the extraordinary quality of the Duanstone material itself and the tasteful combination of nature and the hand of man in its conception, the association with the inscribed fitted cover and the accompanying album gives this inkstone unusual documentation from the time it was recorded in 1832 through to the present day. It would seem that the present inkstone inspired the first album, and, when this came into the hands of Xu Xiaopu, he encouraged his many artist friends to produce a similar album related to another inkstone which he owned and from which he drew his studio name.

The album is completed with an inscription by the Master of the Water, Pine and Stone Retreat:

For thirty years I have frequently stepped back in time to join the friends of the inkstone on a moonlit night in the Half Window Studio, the scent of prunus blossoms in one nostril and ink in the other. Tonight despite the clouds the moon shines again and the subtle scent of blossom sits on the breeze of my memory as I grind ink upon it for the last time to inscribe these little likenesses of the stone.

It has been in many collections over the centuries, the album and the accompanying painting by Qindong recording only a few.

Now it is time to end its three decades in my studio then cut my love for it so it can move on as it should.

Treasures such as these last far longer than fragile life and carry with them so much of the past that remains important for the future. We don’t own them, they merely soujourn a while. What pleasant company this little companion has been.

Inscribed by the Master of the Water, Pine and Stone Retreat at the Garden at the Edge of the Universe in the summer, 2017.

Sotheby's. Water, Pine and Stone Retreat Collection – Treasures, Hong Kong, 03 Oct 2017

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, to receive landmark gifts of Dutch and Flemish art

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Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

BOSTON, MASS.- Today, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, announces that Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo and Susan and Matthew Weatherbie have made a commitment to give their exceptional collections of 17th-century Dutch and Flemish art to the Museum—a donation that will constitute the largest gift of European paintings in MFA history. The Boston-area collectors plan to give the MFA not only their art collections, but also a major research library and funding to establish a Center for Netherlandish Art at the MFA, the first of its kind in the U.S. The donation of 113 works by 76 artists—including one of the finest Rembrandt portraits in private hands—will elevate the Museum’s holdings into one of the country’s foremost collections of Dutch art from the Golden Age and significantly strengthen its representation of Flemish paintings from the time. The Center for Netherlandish Art will encourage sharing works of art with wide audiences through collaborative study, generous loans and a commitment to mentoring the next generation of scholars, furthering the Museum’s mission to bring art and people together. 

We are extremely grateful to the Van Otterloos and Weatherbies for their deep commitment and for their support of the mission of the Museum in such a generous way,” said Matthew Teitelbaum, Ann and Graham Gund Director. “Rose-Marie, Eijk, Susan and Matt are path-breaking collectors and philanthropists. Together, their paintings, combined with those of the MFA, complement each other and enrich our understanding of Dutch and Flemish art. Truly, the whole will be greater than the sum of the parts. We are honored to display, preserve and care for these masterworks, share them with the world, and nurture generations of scholars in the years ahead.” 

By integrating these two exceptional private collections—formed by the Van Otterloos and Weatherbies through decades of committed connoisseurship—with the MFA’s, the Museum will nearly double its holdings of Dutch and Flemish paintings. Beautifully conserved and of the highest quality, works from the promised gifts include all categories of Dutch painting for which the republic of the Netherlands was (and is) best known—portraits, genre scenes, landscapes, seascapes, still lifes, flower pictures, cityscapes and architectural paintings. Together, they afford insight into the 17th-century Dutch way of life, whether it’s through a humorous genre scene by Jan Steen, a luxurious still life by Willem Kalf, a poetic landscape by Jacob Isaacksz. van Ruisdael, an atmospheric marine by Willem van de Velde the Younger or a vibrant flower picture by Rachel Ruysch. Among the Flemish paintings are important oil sketches by Peter Paul Rubens, portraits by the influential Anthony van Dyck, works by pioneering still life painter Osias Beert, and landscapes by Jan Brueghel the Elder. 

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Peter Paul Rubens, Coronation of the Virgin, about 1623. Oil on panel. Susan and Matthew Weatherbie CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Osias Beert, Still Life with Various Vessels on a Table, about 1610. Oil on canvas. Susan and Matthew Weatherbie CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Jacob Isaacksz. van Ruisdael, Wooded River Landscape with Shepherd, about 1655–60. Oil on canvas. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Jacob Isaacksz. van Ruisdael, View of the Plain of Haarlem with Bleaching Grounds, about 1660–63. Susan and Matthew Weatherbie Collection. Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Eijk and I couldn’t be happier that our collection will find a home at the MFA, where it can be displayed, loaned and shared with the widest possible audiences,” said Rose-Marie van Otterloo. “We believe in the MFA and its vision for the Center as a way to stimulate new ideas and connoisseurship, and keep Dutch and Flemish art alive for generations to come.” 

A major highlight of the gifts is Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn’s moving Portrait of Aeltje Uylenburgh (1632). In nearly perfect condition, the portrait displays delicate tones of black-on-black and virtuosic control of the brush. Aeltje Uylenburgh was the cousin both of Rembrandt’s wife-to-be, Saskia, and the prominent art dealer Hendrick Uylenburgh, with whom Rembrandt lived when he first arrived in Amsterdam. In addition to subtly describing the inner life of the subject, the painting provides a crucial bridge between Rembrandt’s early years in his native Leiden, exemplified by the MFA’s Artist in his Studio (1628), and his establishment as a successful portraitist in Amsterdam, illustrated in works such as the Museum’s Reverend Johannes Elison (1634) and Maria Bockenolle (Wife of Johannes Elison) (1634). The gift of Aeltje will bring the number of Rembrandt paintings in the MFA’s collection to an astounding six and is one of many instances where the promised gifts will complement the MFA’s holdings. 

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Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn, Portrait of Aeltje Uylenburgh, 1632. Oil on panel. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn, Portrait of Aeltje Uylenburgh, detail, 1632. Oil on panel. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Collecting Dutch and Flemish art has been a joy for us for many years, and we are equally passionate about supporting education, research and the development of talented young scholars,” said Susan Weatherbie. “Making a commitment to place our collection at the MFA and to found the Center for Netherlandish art is a truly exciting moment for us.”  

In celebration of this historic milestone, the MFA has created a special display in its European galleries, juxtaposing a selection of works from each collection with Dutch and Flemish paintings from the MFA’s holdings.  

Center for Netherlandish Art 
The Van Otterloo and Weatherbie gifts, together with the MFA’s collection, will serve as the foundation for all activities of the Center for Netherlandish Art. The Center, expected to launch in 2020, will be dedicated to preserving, studying and sharing art from the 17th-century Netherlands—countries known today as Holland and Belgium—in New England and around the world. The Center’s programming and exhibitions will be a magnet for curators and conservators; collectors and researchers; scholars and students—encouraging collaboration across disciplines. The shared work and openness to new perspectives will help keep the field of Netherlandish art meaningful and vibrant for future generations. 

Leadership in teaching, mentorship and related scholarship—an area of emphasis in the Museum’s strategic plan, MFA 2020—will be a major focus of the Center. Through partnerships with a wide range of institutions, including universities and liberal arts colleges, the Museum will bring creative minds together and actively engage professors and students in the study of world-class objects. With the goal of creating a robust program of new exhibitions and installations, the Center will provide hands-on experience for aspiring curators. The MFA will also offer a sustained and generous program of loans in order to share the collection widely with museums and educational institutions in the U.S. and abroad.   

Academics from around the world will enjoy access to one of the premier resources for Dutch and Flemish art. A promised gift from the Van Otterloos, the Haverkamp-Begemann Library encompasses more than 20,000 monographs, catalogues and rare books assembled by the late art historian Egbert Haverkamp-Begemann, a mentor to many active scholars and curators of Dutch and Flemish art in the U.S. Additionally, the Center will create opportunities for collaboration on research and publications. Scholarly books produced by the Museum’s publishing imprint, MFA Publications, and prominence on the Museum’s website, mfa.org, will be major tools in sharing the Center’s work with an international audience. 

Study and preservation of art will be at the heart of the Center’s mission. The MFA’s recently announced Conservation Center, planned to open in 2020, will set a new standard in the field. The state-of-the-art facilities, which will include the Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Paintings Conservation Studio, will provide access to advanced technology that will be used to care for and study the collection, as well as space for collaboration and sharing of ideas among conservators, curators and scholars.
 

Significant Highlights of the Van Otterloo and Weatherbie Gifts 
The depth and breadth of the Van Otterloo and Weatherbie gifts are evident in the variety of artists and genres represented, and will allow the MFA to provide a nearly comprehensive overview of the Dutch Golden Age, as well as significantly add to its holdings of Flemish paintings. Nearly two-thirds of the artists represented in the Van Otterloo and Weatherbie collections, including Hendrick Avercamp, Aelbert Cuyp, Willem Claesz. Heda, Willem Kalf and Gerrit van Horthorst, will be new to the Museum’s holdings of paintings. Avercamp’s picturesque Winter Landscape near a Village (about 1610-15), depicting men, women and children skating, fishing and playing kolf (golf) on the ice remind us of the very cold winters of Europe in the early 17th century—an era now known as the “little ice age.” Cuyp’s Orpheus Charming the Animals (about 1640), a rare mythological scene in the artist’s oeuvre, shows the poet from Ovid’s Metamorphoses playing the violin instead of his customary lyre. This subject demonstrates Cuyp’s early interest in integrating animals into his landscapes—a type of composition for which he would be particularly known. Honthorst’s illusionistic A Merry Group behind a Balustrade with a Violin and a Lute Player (about 1623) invites viewers to participate in a musical party. The painting will complement the MFA’s paintings by Hendrick ter Brugghen and Dirck van Baburen, the other important members of the group now called the Utrecht Caravaggisti—Dutch painters who brought Caravaggio’s style north with them on their return from sojourns in Rome. 

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Aelbert Cuyp, Orpheus Charming the Animals, about 1640. Oil on canvas. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Gerrit van Honthorst, A Merry Group behind a Balustrade with a Violin and a Lute Player, about 1623. Oil on canvas. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

The MFA is strong in Dutch history paintings and portraits and holds good examples of the other types of works produced by the many skilled artists active in the period,” said Ronni Baer, William and Ann Elfers Senior Curator of Paintings. “This gift of beautifully preserved paintings will fill major gaps in the collection and allow us to present the full range of artistic production in the Netherlands in the 17th century in varied and meaningful ways.” 

Works by Dutch masters Gerrit Dou and Pieter Jansz. Saenredam will also complement the MFA’s holdings. Dou’s Dog at Rest (1650) is a perfect example of the fine brushwork and endearing subject matter that made the artist one of the most successful painters of the day, while Saenredam’s Interior of the St. Bavo Church, Haarlem (1660) and North Transept and Choir Chapel of the Sint Janskerk, Utrecht (1655) exemplify that artist’s careful study of the actual buildings and his mastery of tonal nuance.  

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Gerrit Dou, Dog at Rest, 1650. Oil on panel. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Collection. Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Pieter Jansz. Saenredam, The North Transept and Choir Chapel of Sint Janskerk, Utrecht, 1655. Oil on panel. Susan and Matthew Weatherbie Collection. Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

The Van Otterloo and Weatherbie collections also include important still lifes by Pieter Claesz., as well as two extraordinary examples by other masters of the genre. Willem Kalf specialized in sophisticated compositions featuring expensive commodities. In Still Life with Lemon Peel (1664), his hallmark strategy of arranging special, spotlit objects as they emerge from a dark background is fully on display. In Willem Claesz. Heda’s Still Life with Glasses and Tobacco (1633), the artist expertly captures a wide range of materials and reflections. The objects appear to be strewn across the table, but Heda arranged them carefully to create interesting shapes and establish tonal harmonies. Flower pictures, from Still Life with Roses in a Glass Vase (about 1619) by Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder to Still Life with Flowers (1709) by Rachel Ruysch—one of the few prominent female artists of her era—will allow the MFA to trace the development of this important genre throughout the course of the 17th century.  

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Willem Kalf,  Still Life with Lemon Peel, 1664. Oil on canvas. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Collection. Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Willem Claesz. Heda, Still Life with Glasses and Tobacco, 1633. Oil on panel. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder, Still Life with Roses in a Glass Vase, about 1619. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

In addition to still lifes, cityscapes will be included in the gifts. View of Haarlem (1671) by Gerrit Berckheyde and View of the Westerkerk, Amsterdam (about 1667–70) by Jan van der Heyden offer exquisitely detailed and accurate depictions of the two major centers of art production in the 17th century and are prime examples of the genre. Many of Haarlem’s important landmarks can be identified in the background of Berckheyde’s work, while Van der Heyden’s painting of the Westerkerk in Amsterdam was studied to help determine the correct shade of blue to repaint the crown when the church underwent restoration in 2006-07.  

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Gerrit Berckheyde, View of Haarlem, 1671. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Collection. Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

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Jan van der Heyden, View of the Westerkerk, Amsterdam, about 1667–70. Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Seascapes, which demonstrate the omnipresence and importance of water in the Netherlands, will also be a significant part of the gifts. Paintings by Willem van de Velde the Younger, among the most important marine painters of the time, showcase his careful observation of details and talent for capturing atmospheric effects. The artist’s A Wijdschip in a Fresh Breeze (about 1665–70), Fishing Boats by the Shore in a Calm (about 1660–65) and A Dutch Flagship Coming to Anchor (about 1672), as well as representative examples by Jan van de Cappelle, Jan Porcellis, Simon de Vlieger, Jan van Goyen, Salomon van Ruysdael and Aert van der Neer, will join Jacob Isaacksz. van Ruisdael’s Rough Sea (about 1670), the only notable seascape in the MFA’s collection of 17th-century Dutch paintings

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Willem van de Velde, the Younger, A Dutch Flagship Coming to Anchor Close to the Land in a Fresh Breeze, about 1672. Oil on canvas. Susan and Matthew Weatherbie CollectionCourtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Sotheby's Geneva to offer "The Raj Pink": The world's largest known Fancy Intense Pink Diamond

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‘The Raj Pink’, the world’s largest known Fancy Intense Pink diamond, weighing 37.30 carats. Estimate US$ 20 – 30 million. Courtesy Sotheby’s.

GENEVA.- Sotheby’s will present ‘The Raj Pink’, the world’s largest known Fancy Intense Pink diamond, weighing 37.30 carats. This superb and exceptionally rare diamond will take centre stage during Sotheby’s sale of Magnificent Jewels and Noble Jewels in Geneva, on 15 November 2017. 

The discovery of any pink diamond is exceptional, but the Raj Pink’s remarkable size and intensity of colour places it in the rarefied company of the most important pink diamonds known.” David Bennett, Worldwide Chairman of Sotheby’s International Jewellery Division 

MAJESTIC PRESENCE 
The rough diamond which yielded ‘The Raj Pink’ was studied for over a year after its discovery in 2015. It was then entrusted to a master cutter, who brought the diamond’s innermost beauty to full display by crafting it into a sparkling cushion-modified brilliant cut. 

The Raj Pink’ was named by the current owner of the diamond, who wishes to remain anonymous. It is based on the Sanskrit word for ‘king’. 

The Gemological Institute of America (GIA), which certified the diamond, characterized it as an “astonishing stone”, describing its hue as “a very bright and ravishing fancy intense pink color”. It continued, “For a diamond to display strong, unmodified pink color like that observed in The Raj Pink is rare, particularly at so considerable a weight”. 

The discovery of a gem-quality pink diamond of any size is an extremely rare occurrence. Of all diamonds submitted to the GIA each year, less than 0.02% are predominantly pink. 

Only on the rarest occasions do diamonds with vibrant, shocking color like the Raj Pink’s emerge… only the most privileged and knowledgeable in the industry know of their existence. With an unmodified Fancy Intense Pink hue, substantial size and desirable clarity, the Raj Pink is certainly one of those gems that only few may have the honor of experiencing.” --Gemological Institute of America.

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‘The Raj Pink’, the world’s largest known Fancy Intense Pink diamond, weighing 37.30 carats. Estimate US$ 20 – 30 million. Courtesy Sotheby’s.

Exhibition focuses on the power structures, god-worship and everyday life in Ancient Egypt

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COPENHAGEN.- In an impressive special exhibition the Glyptotek gives a glimpse into the power structures, god-worship and everyday life in Ancient Egypt when Pharaoh reigned as a personified god and undisputed authority. 

Ancient Egypt has always fascinated us. Not least the legendary pharaohs – the kings who ruled over them all, who were more gods than human beings – were the subject of many tales through the ages. In the exhibition, “Pharaoh – the Face of Power” we examine the period 2000-1700 BC, known as the “Middle Kingdom” when the Egyptian realm rose again after a period of decline, and strong pharaohs united the country with centralised power. Here visitors can experience how, 4000 years ago, it was possible to construct personal myths and manage to rule a people – with absolutely no help from spin doctors, the press or the social media. 

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King Amenemhet III. Photo credit: Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Anders Sune Berg

Objects from New York, Boston and Stockholm 
Objects from the Glyptotek’s own Egyptian collection, which is among the finest in the world, will be exhibited in ”Pharaoh. The Face of Power” side by side with loans from such institutions as The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Medelhavsmuseet in Stockholm, The National Museum of Denmark and The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Together they present the visitors with a unique glimpse into the culture surrounding the powerful pharaohs and provide an opportunity to come really close to Ancient Egypt through everything from monumental sculptures to fine small amulets.  

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Falcon wearing a double crown – pendant. Photo credit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Crocodile God Sobek is Crowned 
The collaboration with the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston has a special background. In 2010, Tine Bagh, the Glyptotek’s Egyptologist, travelled to Boston with a plaster cast of the base of what was believed to be the crown from a statue of the Crocodile God Sobek. In Boston it was established that the crown, which belongs to the Glyptotek, fits the statue of Sobek in Boston. In connection with ”Pharaoh. The Face of Power” the two have been reunited so that, for the first time since the days of Ancient Egypt it will be possible to see Sobek together with his fabulous king’s crown. 

”It is seven years ago that we managed to have it confirmed that the crown in the Glyptotek belongs with the statue in Boston. That it is now possible to bring the two parts together and exhibit them for the pleasure of all the Glyptotek’s visitors, is a quite fantastic experience.” says Tine Bagh. 

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Sesostris III / Senwosret III as a sphinx. Photo credit: The metropolitan Museum of Art

he Black Head of a King Finds Himself in Company 
As well as the re-crowned Sobek, one can also, in the exhibition, experience the Glyptotek’s iconic “Black Head of a King” (Amenemhat III), who will have the company of a counterpart on loan from The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. In contrast to the Glyptotek’s head, the one from New York still has its characteristic large ears intact. The two versions of Amenemhat III will be exhibited side by side with such works as a sphinx representing Amenemhat III’s father, Sesostris III, and a head representing Sesostris I. Together with a number of other portraits of pharaohs, they give us an idea of how sculptors portrayed, and thus how people visualised power in the ”Middle Kingdom”.  

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Sesostris II / Senwosret II. Photocredit: Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek

Come Eye-to-Eye with a Pharaoh and Hear Hieroglyphs Read Aloud 
Ancient Egypt and the lives of the pharaohs are full of good stories and myths which appeal to both great and small. In order to make sure that the small can also come eye-to-eye with the pharaohs, there are several places in the exhibition where steps have been provided so that children can come up level with the display cases. If a child wants to dive into the good stories, such as that of the hippo, which was both dangerous and also a protective figure, or learn more about Osiris – Egypt’s first mummy – then there’s plenty of room for all that in the exhibition’s special children’s material. 

In addition, at special listening points in the exhibition both children and adults can hear texts, originally written in hieroglyphs, read aloud in Ancient Egyptian, Arabic, Danish and English so as to get a feeling of what it sounded like when Pharaoh spoke.

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Children looking at Nekhetkawis’ coffin. Photo credit: Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Ana Cecilia Gonzalez

Très rare tigre blanc taxidermisé

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Lot 249. Très rare tigre blanc. Estimation: 15 000 € / 20 000 €. Courtesy Artcurial

taxidermisé en entier en position de marche, monté sur un socle naturaliste (sur roulettes). Dimensions du spécimen : Long. : 227 cm, Haut. : 110 cm. Socle : Long. : 220 cm, Prof. : 60 cm, Haut. : 21 cm. I/A Panthera tigris, Cites délivré le 28 avril 2017. 

Note : Le tigre blanc, parfois aussi appelé tigre blanc royal, est une mutation colorée du tigre (Panthera tigris), un mammifère carnivore de la famille des Félidés. Son pelage est blanc avec des rayures plus ou moins noires. 

Il s'agit en réalité d'un tigre du Bengale possédant une anomalie génétique appelée leucistisme ou leucisme. On ne doit pas le confondre avec les spécimens albinos qui n'ont pas de rayures et des yeux plutôt clairs, parfois surnommés tigres fantômes en raison de leur apparence particulière, due dans ce cas à une maladie génétique, l'albinisme. 

Les tigres blancs commencent à faire parler d'eux vers la fin du XIXe siècle : quelques spécimens sauvages sont signalés. Des tigres blancs à rayures noires sont signalés dans la nature en Inde durant l'Empire moghol (1556–1605). 

Leurs chances de survie sont largement compromises par cette couleur atypique qui les empêche de se camoufler dans la forêt et de surprendre leurs proies. Exceptionnels dans la nature, ils sont quelques centaines dans le monde, répartis principalement dans les parcs zoologiques et les réserves animalières.

Histoire naturelle, Curiosité, Étain chez Artcurial,75009, le 13 Octobre 2017 à 14h00

Vũ Cao Đàm (1908-2000), Rituel animiste, vers 1930

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Vũ Cao Đàm (1908-2000), Rituel animiste, vers 1930

Lot 156. Vũ Cao Đàm (1908-2000), Rituel animiste, vers 1930. Estimation: 15 000 € / 20 000 €. Courtesy FFAP

Encre et gouache sur soie. Signée, marquée du sceau de l'artiste et datée en bas à gauche, 55 x 46 cm. - 21 3/4 x 18 1/4 in. 

Ink and gouache on silk, signed, marqued with the artist' stamp and dated lower left

L'authenticité de cette oeuvre a été confirmée par Mme Yannick VU-JAKOBER fille et ayant-droit de l'artiste.

120 Tableaux de l'Ancienne Collection Bernasconi - 25 sculptures de Lucien Gibert - Art Moderne, Tableaux Russes ... chez FAAP - Fine Art Auctions Paris, Paris, le 17 Octobre 2017 à 15h00


Lot composé de deux jarres cylindriques, Vietnam, Dynastie des Lý (1110-1225)

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Lot composé de deux jarres cylindriques, Vietnam, Dynastie des Lý, 11°-13° siècle

Lot 119. Lot composé de deux jarres cylindriques, Vietnam, Dynastie des Lý (1110-1225)Estimation: 150 € / 300 €Photo Cornette de Saint-Cyr

Grès à couverte crème. H. 16 – 17,5 cm. D. 17 – 18 cm.

Arts d’Asie chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 75008 Paris, le 31 Octobre 2017 à 14h30Expert : Cabinet Daffos-Estournel. Tel. : +33 6 09 22 55 13. Consultant pour le Vietnam : Monsieur Philippe Truong. Tel. : +33 6 31 34 40 59

Jadeite Bead and Diamond Necklace

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Lot 9140. Jadeite Bead and Diamond NecklaceEstimate 300,000 — 500,000 HKDLot Sold 1,062,500 HKD. Photo: Sotheby's. 

Composed of forty-nine graduated jadeite beads of intense green colour and very good translucency, to the step-cut and triangular diamond-set clasp, mounted in platinum and white gold, length approximately 430mm. Beads approximately 10.15 to 5.71mm.

NoteAcompanied by Hong Kong Jade & Stone Laboratory certificate numbered SJ 154020, dated 20 July 2017, stating that the jadeite tested is natural, known in the trade as "A Jade".

Sotheby's. Important Jewels and Jadeite, Hong Kong, 12 Oct 2017

Diamond Ring

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Lot 9203. 4.00 carats Cushion-shaped Diamond RingEstimate 900,000 — 1,200,000 HKDLot Sold 1,125,000 HKD. Photo: Sotheby's. 

Set with a cushion-shaped diamond weighing 4.00 carats, flanked on each side by a half-moon-shaped diamond, mounted in platinum. Ring size: 6¼.

NoteAccompanied by GIA report numbered 5171962900, dated 3 January 2017, stating that the 4.00 carat diamond is D Colour, Flawless, with Excellent Polish and Symmetry.

Sotheby's. Important Jewels and Jadeite, Hong Kong, 12 Oct 2017

Jadeite Bead, Garnet and Diamond Necklace

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Lot 9136. Jadeite Bead, Garnet and Diamond NecklaceEstimate 300,000 — 400,000 HKDLot Sold 400,000 HKD. Photo: Sotheby's. 

The double strand necklace composed of sixty-six and sixty graduated translucent jadeite beads of intense emerald green colour, decorated with circular-cut diamond-set rondelles, to the clasp set with oval garnets weighing approximately 9.50 carats in total, mounted in 18 karat white gold, clasp signed Tiffany & Co., length approximately 460mm, pouch stamped Mason Tsai. Beads approximately 9.46 to 3.73mm..

NoteAccompanied by Hong Kong Jade & Stone Laboratory certificate numbered SJ 130465, dated 21 March 2016, stating that the jadeite tested is natural, known in the trade as "A Jade".

Sotheby's. Important Jewels and Jadeite, Hong Kong, 12 Oct 2017

Harn Museum of Art displays French art featuring women in the 18th - early 19th centuries

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GAINESVILLE, FL.- The Harn Museum of Art at the University of Florida is presenting an exhibition of more than 150 drawings, pastels, paintings and sculptures addressing some of the most important and defining questions of women’s lives in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Becoming a Woman in the Age of Enlightenment: French Art from The Horvitz Collection is on view from Oct. 6 to Dec. 31, 2017. 

Ranging from spirited, improvisational sketches and figural studies to highly finished drawings of exquisite beauty, the works included in the exhibition are by many of the most prominent artists of the time. They include Antoine Watteau, Nicolas Lancret, François Boucher, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, as well as lesser-known artists both male and female, such as Anne Vallayer-Coster, Gabrielle Capet, François-André Vincent and Philibert-Louis Debucourt. 

Becoming a Woman in the Age of Enlightenment has been organized into sections that address cultural attitudes and conditions that shaped how women were defined in the 18th and early 19th centuries. These sections include “The Fair Sex: Conceptions and Paradigms of Woman;” “Women in Training;” “What’s Love Got To Do With It?;” “Married with Children;” “Dressing the Part;” “Aging Gracefully;” “Pleasurable Pursuits;” “Private Pleasures” and “Work: Leaving it to the Professionals.” 

“Becoming a Woman will offer opportunities to consider how its themes compare to some of the most pressing social issues of our own time and how things may or may not have changed,” said Melissa Hyde, guest curator of the exhibition. “Although the circumstances and the specifics have changed, pay equity, reproductive rights, violence against women and work-family balance are but a few of the many women’s issues covered in the exhibition that still remain today.” 

Becoming a Woman is curated by Melissa Hyde, Professor of Art History and Research Foundation Professor, University of Florida, and the late Mary D. Sheriff, W.R. Kenan J. Distinguished Professor of Art History, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and is organized by Alvin L. Clark, Jr, Curator, The Horvitz Collection and The J.E. Horvitz Research Curator, Harvard Art Museums/Fogg. An illustrated catalogue accompanies the exhibition and be available for purchase in the Museum Store.

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Antoine Vestier, Allegory of the Arts, 1788,  Oil on canvas. The Horvitz Collection.

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Marie-Anne Fragonard, Bust-length Portrait of a Young Girl. n.d. Gouache on off-white paper, 2 1/2 x 2 1/4 in. The Horvitz Collection.

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Pierre-Hubert Subleyras, Anne-Marie Zina Durand de Lironcourt; oil on canvas. 72 x 60.5 cm. The Horvitz Collection.

 

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Charles-Joseph Natoire, Erato Serenading Thalia, Euterpe, and Melpomene, 1738. Oil on canvas. The Horvitz Collection.

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Louis-Léopold Boilly, Conversation in a Park, 1800-1810. Oil on canvas. The Horvitz Collection.

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Jacques-Antoine-Marie Lemoine, Woman Standing in a Garden, 1783, Black chalk and brush with gray wash on off-white laid paper. The Horvitz Collection.

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François Boucher, Young Travelers, black chalk on cream antique laid paper, framing line in black ink, laid down on a decorated mount, 295 x 188 mm.The Horvitz Collection.

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Jacques-Louis David, Andromache Mourning the Death of Hector, pen with black ink and brush with gray wash over traces of black chalk on cream antique laid paper, 293 x 248 mm.The Horvitz Collection.

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Jean-Baptiste Greuze, The Chestnut Vendor, brush with gray and brown wash on cream antique laid paper, 385 x 460 mm. The Horvitz Collection.

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