Quantcast
Channel: Alain.R.Truong
Viewing all 36084 articles
Browse latest View live

A famille-rose 'landscape' bowl, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795)

$
0
0

A famille-rose 'landscape' bowl, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795)

3

Lot 40. A famille-rose'landscape' bowl, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795); 18.4cm., 7 ¼in. Estimate 15,000 — 20,000 GBP. Lot sold 134,500 GBP. Photo Sotheby’s

with deep rounded sides rising from a slightly tapered foot to an everted rim, painted around the exterior with a continuous landscape depicting a large walled compound of storeyed pavilions built on a lake island surrounded by green and turquoise cliffs and arbored with lofty pines and wutong trees, with distant figures standing on the grassy banks or crossing over an arched bridge, all below wispy clouds and misty mountains in the far distance, the interior similarly painted in the centre with a cottage on a shore below willow trees among turquoise blue and green mountains, the base inscribed in underglaze blue with a six-character seal mark.

ProvenanceCollection of Henrik V. Jacobsen, General Director of East Asiatic Company.

Note: Idealised landscapes encircling the exterior of a bowl, similar to a painting on an unrolled handscroll, are rarely found on Qianlong porcelain. Such continuous paintings commanded not only accomplished brushwork but also particular skill at composition. No other related bowl appears to have been published, although a set of ten nested bowls with straight sides and each bearing a Qianlong reign mark and of the period was offered in our Hong Kong rooms, 27th April 1993, lot 219. Compare Jiaqing (1796-1820) mark and period bowls similarly depicting landscapes, the interior rim encircled with an iron red band of ruyi heads and roundel in the centre, such as one sold in our Hong Kong rooms, 22nd May 1986, lot 353; and a pair sold in these rooms, 18thJune 1985, lot 198.

Imperial bowls decorated with scenes of landscapes are more commonly known depicted within medallions on a coloured ground; see a pair of blue-ground bowls, in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, published in Stunning Decorative Porcelains from the Ch’ien-lung Reign, Taipei, 2008, pl. 13, together with a yellow version, pl. 14; and two examples, one on a yellow ground and the other on a ruby ground, in the Palace Museum, Beijing, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures  of the Palace Museum. Porcelains with Cloisonné Enamel Decoration and Famille Rose Decoration, 1999, pls 103 and 104 respectively.

For a vase painted with a continuous landscape scene around the body, see one from the J.T. Tai collection, sold in our Hong Kong, rooms, 7th October 2010, lot 2130.

Sotheby’s. Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art, London, 05 nov. 2014, 10:00 AM


A large famille-verte monteith, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

$
0
0

A large famille-verte monteith, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period

Lot 311. A large famille-verte monteith, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722); 56cm., 22in. Estimate 60,000 — 80,000 GBP. Lot sold 122,500 GBP. Photo Sotheby’s

of oval form supported on four claw and ball feet, the crenallated rim above a pair of lion mask and ring handles, enamelled on each side with a knarled tree growing from rocks and bearing fruit and flowers, the rim bordered with various flowering plants and edged in cell pattern with carp swimming around the interior rim above large fish shown amidst waterweeds and other aquatic creatures.

Sotheby’s. Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art, London, 05 nov. 2014

A small famille verte erotic subject cup, Kangxi period (1662-1722).

$
0
0

A small famille verte erotic subject cup, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 66. A small famille verte erotic subject cup, Kangxi period (1662-1722); 2 in. (5.1 cm.) high. Estimate £3,000 – £5,000 ($4,791 – $7,985). Price Realized  £4,000 ($6,392)Photo Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The delicately-potted cup is decorated to the exterior with an erotic scene of two lovers with their clothes thrown over stools to either side, cloth stand

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A fine ru-type cong, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795)

$
0
0

A fine ru-type cong, Qianlong seal mark and period

3

Lot 36. A fine ru-type cong, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795); 28.7cm., 11 ¼in. Estimate 15,00020,000 GBP. Lot sold 92,500 GBPPhoto Sotheby’s

of square section with straight sides rising from a spreading foot to a short waisted neck, moulded on each side with the bagua (Eight Trigrams) arranged into two columns, covered overall in a crackled greyish-blue glaze stopping at the footring to reveal the brown body, the base inscribed with a six-character seal mark.

Provenance: Sotheby’s Hong Kong, 27th/28th April 1993, lot 92.

Sotheby’s. Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art, London, 05 nov. 2014, 10:00 AM

A fine copper-red ‘Three Fish’ bowl, Yongzheng mark and period (1723-1795)

$
0
0

A fine copper-red ‘Three Fish’ bowl, Yongzheng mark and period (1723-1795)

3

Lot 8. A fine copper-red ‘Three Fish’ bowl, Yongzheng mark and period (1723-1795); 15cm., 5 7/8 in. Estimate 70,000 — 90,000 GBP. Lot sold 92,500 GBP. Photo: Sotheby’s

delicately potted with deep curved sides rising from a straight foot to a flared rim, the exterior boldly decorated with three mandarin fish in rich copper-red silhouettes, all reserved on a white ground, the interior left undecorated, inscribed to the base with a six-character reign mark within a double-circle.

Provenance: Sotheby’s Hong Kong, 25th April 2004, lot 303.

Note: Designs in the form of underglaze-red silhouettes of animals and fish originated in the Yongle period (1403-24), when they were generally combined with underglaze-blue decoration, and by the Xuande reign (1426-35) they were often used on their own. On early Ming vessels the red fish are, however, mainly seen on stemcups and stembowls. A rare fragmentary cup with red mandarin fish, recovered from the Xuande stratum of the Ming Imperial kiln site at Jingdezhen, was included in the exhibition Jingdezhen chutu Ming Xuande guanyao ciqi [Xuande Imperial Porcelain Excavated at Jingdezhen], Chang Foundation, Taipei, 1998, cat. no. 101-2.

After the Xuande period this style of decoration was rarely used until it was revived in the Qing dynasty. Yongzheng mark and period bowls of this form and design are held in important museums and private collections worldwide; see one in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, included in the Museum’s exhibition Ming Chenghua ciqi tezhan [Special exhibition of Ming Chenghua porcelain], Taipei, 1977, cat. no. 100; one in the Nanjing Museum, included in the exhibition Qing Imperial Porcelain of the Kangxi, Yongzheng and Qianlong Reigns, Art Gallery, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, 1995, cat. no. 49; another in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, published in Rose Kerr, Chinese Ceramics. Porcelain of the Qing Dynasty 1644-1911, London, 1998, pl. 11; and a fourth from the Meiyintang collection, sold in our Hong Kong rooms, 9thOctober 2012, lot 50. Compare also a bowl decorated with this design, but with a slightly more flared rim, in the Qingjiang County Museum, Jiangxi province, published in Complete Series on Chinese Ceramics, vol. 14, Shanghai, 2000, vol. 14, pl. 162.

Sotheby’s. Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art, London, 05 nov. 2014, 10:00 AM

A ge-type cong, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795)

$
0
0

A ge-type cong, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795)

 

3

Lot 33. A ge-type cong, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795); 28.5cm., 11 ¼in. Estimate 15,000 —20,000 GBP. Lot sold 68,500 GBPPhoto Sotheby’s

of square section with straight sides rising from a spreading foot to a short waisted neck, moulded on each side with the bagua (Eight Trigrams) arranged into two columns, covered overall in a greyish-blue glaze suffused with a network of russet-brown crackle, stopping at the footring to reveal the brown body, the base inscribed with a six-character seal mark.

Sotheby’s. Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art, London, 05 nov. 2014, 10:00 AM

"Shakespeare romantique" au musée Félicien Rops

$
0
0

2

Eugène Delacroix, Roméo et Juliette, vers 1850, huile sur papier marouflé sur toile, Paris, Musée national Eugène Delacroix, MD 2008-3. © RMN-Grand Palais musée du Louvre Mathieu Rabeau

NAMUR.-  «Ah, la vie a des moments drôles et imprévus & sublimes à la fois comme dans Shakespeare !»écrivait Félicien Rops.

William Shakespeare (1564-1616) acquiert en Angleterre, dès 1750, le titre de maître de la littérature nationale. En France, il faudra attendre le 19e siècle pour que l’oeuvre du dramaturge prenne toute son ampleur, grâce à l’intérêt des auteurs mais aussi des peintres romantiques. Les grandes fresques littérai- res du passé, celles de Dante, de Racine, mais aussi de Shakespeare deviennent alors des sources d’inspiration essentielles pour les auteurs romantiques mais aussi pour les peintres, qui entretiennent une relation particulière à l’art de la mise en scène. Eugène Delacroix, Gustave Moreau, Théodore Chassériau et bien d’autres peintres, graveurs et sculpteurs français ont consacré leur talent à interpréter les sentiments, drames et passions des héros shakespeariens. 

Hamlet et Ophélie, Roméo et Juliette, Macbeth et sa « Lady », Othello et Desdémo- ne, autant de personnages aux destins dramatiques hantés par l’amour, les re- mords et la mort. L’exposition au musée Rops se décline autour de ces figures tragiques qui inspireront les artistes du milieu du 19e siècle en quête de gran- des épopées amoureuses, d’étrangeté et de valeurs morales. Dans la continuité du romantisme, les artistes symbolistes ont, à leur tour, représenté les héros shakespeariens, tels des archétypes des passions humaines. Constantin Meunier, Alfred Stevens, Eugène Smits et d’autres artistes belges subissent l’influence du théâtre anglais pour laisser transparaître leurs doutes et interrogations face à cette fin-de-siècle qu’ils tentent d’apprivoiser. 

Grâce à la collaboration avec le musée du Louvre et le musée national Eugène-Delacroix, une soixantaine de peintures, gravures, affiches et sculptures de différentes institutions sont rassemblées au musée Rops pour donner la mesure de l’impact du théâtre de Shakespeare sur les arts pla- stiques au 19e siècle dont les représentations inspirent, aujourd’hui encore, les metteurs en scène et les comédiens. 

Exposition du 21/10/17 au 25/02/18

3

Jules Bastien-Lepage, Ophélie, 1881, huile sur toile, Nancy, musée des beaux-arts, inv. 1235. © G. Mangin

NAMUR.- The early 19th century witnessed a real rediscovery of Shakespeare in France. The feelings, strangeness and morals found in the poet’s tragedies influenced painters, engravers and sculptors to create an art of emotion and narration. Delacroix, Chassériau, Moreau, Préault and the Belgian artists Samuel, Meunier, Smits and Stevens all drew inspiration from the world of the English playwright. 

The exhibition Romantic Shakespeare is dedicated to the way in which artists in the Romantic period and then from the late 19th century saw in the works of the English author, who had died almost two centuries previously, a source of inspiration for their own creations. They used his writings to open up the possibility of reviving art, drama and painting. Shakespeare thus became a romantic icon. 

This exhibition, which is the result of a partnership with the Louvre and the national Eugène-Delacroix museum, presents sixty outstanding works from French museum collections, supplemented by Belgian fin-de-siècle artists. 

4

Alfred Stevens, Lady Macbeth, s.d., huile sur toile, Musées de Verviers, inv. 616. Photo J. Spitz

William Shakespeare and his reception 
William Shakespeare (Stratford-upon-Avon, 1564-1616) is the playwright whose work is most widely performed, read and commented on in the world. Combining the sublime and the ridiculous, his plays surprise with the richness and penetrating charm of his style, his command of dramatic construction and the abundance of his characters. And yet his life remains an enigma for historians and his texts are a challenge for translators. Some people long doubted his very existence, while others disputed the authorship of certain works. These quarrels are now largely behind us. His existence has been historical established and he is indeed considered to be the author of his plays, even if their chronology is approximate. 

Whereas in the early 18th century Shakespeare’s tragedies did not influence the plastic arts, by the end of the century, entire galleries were devoted to them. Engravings depicting scenes from his plays became popular both in the form of prints and as illustrations in various publications. “The second half of the 18th century saw a multiplication not only of Shakespearian illustrations but also of painted interpretations, produced by leading artists of the time. Around 1760, almost one-third of the plays performed in London in the course of a year were works by the Elizabethan playwright, stressing the topicality of his influence over 150 years after his death.”2 

Engravings publisher John Boydell officially opened the Shakespeare Gallery in London in 1789. The project was born in the context of an emerging British national culture and deliberations on how to celebrate it. William Shakespeare appeared as the obvious standard bearer of this national culture, and images of the playwright were imprinted in the collective imagination through paintings and engravings.

5

Paul Steck, Ophélie, 1894, huile sur toile, Paris, Musée du Petit Palais, Musée des Beaux-Arts de la ville de Paris, in. 3696.© RMN-Grand Palais Agence Bulloz

Why did the French Romantics revive Shakespeare’s plays? 
Romanticism is a literary and artistic movement that appeared in England in the 18th century and then in France in the 19th century, promoting the exaltation of feelings and passions, and the liberation of the imagination. 

It was not until the 1820s that the work of the English playwright really became significant in France thanks to the interest of Romantic authors but also painters. The major literary panoramas of the past, those of Dante and Racine but also Shakespeare, became vital sources of inspiration for the Romantics, who maintained a special relationship with the art of stage production. In the midst of the English revival, Victor Hugo wrote Cromwell (1827), the first Romantic play about 17th-century England. His son, François-Victor, then translated the complete works of Shakespeare, which appeared in 1859. Among the many French adaptations of the time, the French actress Sarah Bernhardt took on the male role of Hamlet, already a highly popular character. 

The discovery or rediscovery of Shakespeare’s works was to help the Romantics to affirm, on stage, the right of the body to be recognised and, in language, the right to mix registers. Readings and performances of these plays were to contribute towards the depiction of violence in history, but also towards the liberation from the rules of classical theatre and decorum. Thanks to Shakespeare’s works, dramatists and painters alike felt free to proclaim disorder in dramatic art, released from the hierarchy of the genres. The violence of the Elizabethan dramas was imported into the Romantic scene: as in Shakespeare, there was a lot of death and killing. 

The strength of the passions expressed, the strangeness of the characters and the plots, the temporal and spatial freedom of Shakespeare’s plays captivated French painters, engravers and sculptors such as Eugène Delacroix, Gustave Moreau, Théodore Chassériau and others. Shakespeare’s works were a notable source to renew their creation, bringing forth an art of emotion and narration. The Romantics adopted many motifs, situations, principles of dramatic art and character types which nurtured their aesthetics of dread. 

6

Félicien Rops, Frontispice pour les Oeuvres inutiles et nuisibles avec en marge Morticulture, 1879-1880, héliogravure reprise à l'eau-forte, pointe sèche et vernis mou, crayon et encre de Chine. AMIS, inv. GD E0418

A flambé-glazed bottle vase, Yongzheng four-character seal mark and of the period (1723-1735)

$
0
0

2

Lot 226. A flambé-glazed bottle vase, Yongzheng four-character seal mark and of the period (1723-1735); 6½ in. (16.5 cm.) high. Estimate £3,000 – £5,000 ($4,791 – $7,985). Price Realized  £23,750 ($37,929)©  Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The vase is sturdily potted with a long slender neck and bulbous body and is covered in a vibrant pinkish-purple glaze streaked with cream and suffused with a subtle web of crackles. 

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington


A flambé-glazed water pot, Yongzheng four-character seal mark and of the period (1723-1735)

$
0
0

A flambé-glazed water pot, Yongzheng four-character seal mark and of the period (1723-1735)

Lot 222. A flambé-glazed water pot, Yongzheng four-character seal mark and of the period (1723-1735); 4 in. (10.2 cm.) wide. Estimate £3,000 – £5,000 ($4,791 – $7,985). Price Realized  £13,750 ($21,959)Photo Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The globular water pot is covered in a pinkish-purple glaze with creamy streaks emanating from the mouth rim and a faint network of dark crackles. 

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A flambé-glazed vase, 18th century

$
0
0

A flambé-glazed vase, 18th century

Lot 223. A flambé-glazed vase, 18th century; 19 3/8 in. (49.2 cm.) high. Estimate £3,000 – £5,000 ($4,791 – $7,985). Price Realized  £8,125 ($12,976). Photo Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The vase is covered in a streaked dark strawberry-red glaze infused with purple splashes thinning to a mushroom colour at the mouth rim and dripping over the foot. 

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A pair of ormolu-mounted flambé-glazed bottle vases, 18th century

$
0
0

A pair of ormolu-mounted flambé-glazed bottle vases, 18th century

Lot 224. A pair of ormolu-mounted flambé-glazed bottle vases, 18th century; 8¼ in. (20.8 cm.) high overall. Estimate £2,000 – £4,000 ($3,194 – $6,388). Price Realized  £2,750 ($4,392)Photo Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The vases are covered in a crackled deep red and lavender streaked glaze thinning to a mushroom tone at the rims. Each vase fixed on an ormolu base. 

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A small robin’s-egg-glazed vase, meiping, Yongzheng four-character seal mark in blue and of the period (1723-1735)

$
0
0

A small robin’s-egg-glazed vase, meiping, Yongzheng four-character seal mark in blue and of the period (1723-1735)

2

Lot 230. A small robin’s-egg-glazed vase, meiping, Yongzheng four-character seal mark in blue and of the period (1723-1735); 4½ in. (11.6 cm.) high. Estimate £4,000 – £6,000 ($6,388 – $9,582). Price Realized  £21,250 ($33,958)© Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The vase is covered with a turquoise and purple speckled glaze. 

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A peachbloom-glazed ‘beehive’ water pot, taibo zun, Kangxi six-character mark in underglaze blue and of the period (1662-1722)

$
0
0

A peachbloom-glazed ‘beehive’ water pot, taibo zun, Kangxi six-character mark in underglaze blue and of the period (1662-1722)

Lot 232. A peachbloom-glazed ‘beehive’ water pot, taibo zun, Kangxi six-character mark in underglaze blue and of the period (1662-1722); 5 in. (12.7 cm.) diam. Estimate £3,000 – £5,000 ($4,791 – $7,985). Price Realized  £8,125 ($12,984)©  Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The domed body is incised to the exterior with three dragon roundels and is covered with a peachbloom glaze fired to a dark olive green tone, and thinning to light apple-green and red around the mouth and foot. 

Provenance: Private Australian Collection, acquired prior to 1968.

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A famille rose pink-ground cup , Yongzheng four-character mark and of the period (1723-1735)

$
0
0

A famille rose pink-ground cup , Yongzheng four-character mark and of the period (1723-1735)

Lot 229. famille rose pink-ground cup , Yongzheng four-character mark and of the period (1723-1735); 2 5/8 in. (6.7 cm.) highEstimate £2,000 – £3,000 ($3,194 – $4,791). Price Realized  £2,500 ($3,995). © Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The cup is decorated to the exterior with three peony blooms and scrolling foliage above a petal band around the foot. 

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A green-enamelled porcelain ruyi sceptre, 19th century

$
0
0

A green-enamelled porcelain ruyi sceptre, 19th century

Lot 6. A green-enamelled porcelain ruyi sceptre, 19th century; 19 7/8 in. (50.5 cm.) long. Estimate £1,200 – £1,500 ($1,916 – $2,396). Price Realized  £3,250 ($5,190). © Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The sceptre is moulded with shou characters, and is painted in green tones imitating jadeite. 

Provenance: Gifted to the vendor in 1975.

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington


A green-glazed 'leaf' brush washer, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

$
0
0

A green-glazed 'leaf' brush washer, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 316. A green-glazed 'leaf' brush washer, Kangxi period (1662-1722); 5 3/8 in. (13.8 cm.) long. Estimate GBP 1,500 - GBP 2,500Price realised GBP 8,750© Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The brush washer is modelled as a leaf with curling edges, and with holes to one side to simulate nibbles by an insect.

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A ‘faux bamboo’ brush pot, 19th century

$
0
0

A ‘faux bamboo’ brush pot, 19th century

Lot 104. A ‘faux bamboo’ brush pot, 19th century; 3 ½ in. (8.9 cm.) high. Estimate £1,000 – £1,500 ($1,597 – $2,396). Price Realized  £3,750 ($5,989). © Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The brush pot is moulded in the form of a bamboo stem and is decorated to the exterior with three bands of archaistic dragons. It is covered in an ochre wash and is painted with dark lines and small dots to simulate the natural fibres of bamboo. There is an apocryphal six-character Qianlong seal mark to the base. 

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A Longquan celadon ‘Twin Fish’ dish, Ming dynasty (1368-1644)

$
0
0

A Longquan celadon ‘Twin Fish’ dish, Ming dynasty (1368-1644)

Lot 234. A Longquan celadon ‘Twin Fish’ dish, Ming dynasty (1368-1644); 14 in. (35.7 cm.) diam. Estimate £2,000 – £3,000 ($3,194 – $4,791). Price Realized  £32,500 ($51,935). Photo Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The dish is supported on a short foot and has shallow ribbed sides. The interior is carved with two carp surrounded by a floral spray at the well. The glaze is of a sea-green tone. 

Provenance: Inherited by the current owner from his mother in the 1980s.

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A Longquan celadon Floral dish, Ming dynasty (1368-1644)

$
0
0

A Longquan celadon Floral dish, Ming dynasty (1368-1644)

Lot 236. A Longquan celadon Floral dish, Ming dynasty (1368-1644); 13 in. (33.2 cm.) diam. Estimate £1,000 – £1,500 ($1,597 – $2,396). Price Realized  £3,000 ($4,794). Photo Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The dish is supported on a short foot and the interior is moulded with ribs surrounding a central moulded flower spray. The glaze is of a pale celadon tone. 

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

A Longquan celadon ‘Dragon’ dish, Ming dynasty (1368-1644)

$
0
0

A Longquan celadon ‘Dragon’ dish, Ming dynasty (1368-1644)

Lot 237. A Longquan celadon ‘Dragon’ dish, Ming dynasty (1368-1644); 14 3/8 in. (36.4 cm.) diam. Estimate £2,000 – £3,000 ($3,194 – $4,791). Price Realized  £43,750 ($69,913). Photo Christie’s Image Ltd 2014

The dish is supported on a short foot and has ribbed sides. The interior is modelled with a ferocious four-clawed dragon chasing the flaming pearl, surrounded by a flower spray at the well. The glaze is of a pale green celadon tone. 

Christie’s. CHINESE CERAMICS, WORKS OF ART AND TEXTILES PART I, 4 November 2014, London, South Kensington

Viewing all 36084 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images