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An Exceptional Imperial Black Lacquer Qiangjin 'Dragon' Scroll Box. Qing Dynasty, Qianlong Period

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An Exceptional Imperial Black Lacquer Qiangjin 'Dragon' Scroll Box. Qing Dynasty, Qianlong Period - Photo Sotheby's

of rectangular section, made specially to hold the scroll Nanxun tu di er juan ('Second Scroll of the Southern Inspection Tour'), the title incised in regular script and picked out in gilt, followed by the date reading Kangxi ershiba nian sisi [jisi] zheng yue('First month in the 28th year of the Kangxi period', corresponding to 1689) and a square seal Tianfu zhencang ('Treasured and kept in the Imperial Collection'), all within a rectangular panel surrounded by three ferocious dragons in different poses striding amongst scrolling clouds above cresting waves, the sides of the cover similarly adorned with writhing dragons and swirling clouds, the interior of the fitted box with high walls covered in red lacquer suffused with golden speckles, the exterior lacquered black and decorated around the platform base with a continuous border of pendent stylised lappets; 78.5 cm., 31 in. Estimation: 3,000,000 - 4,000,000 HKD - Lot. Vendu 3,620,000 HKD

NOTE DE CATALOGUE
Packaging of Historical Importance
Hajni Elias
The present lacquer box was made to preserve the second handscroll from a series of 12 scroll paintings titled Kangxi Nanxun tu ('Emperor Kangxi's Southern Inspection Tour'). As well as representing a beautifully crafted piece by the hand of a lacquer ware artist employed by the Neiwufu (Imperial Household Department) located within the Imperial Palace grounds in Beijing, it is also of historical importance for its association with possibly the greatest painting projects conducted during the reign of the Kangxi emperor. See the box made for the tenth scroll, which is in the collection of the Palace Museum in Beijing and is illustrated in Qing Legacies: The Sumptuous Art of Imperial Packaging, The Macao Museum of Art, Macau, 2000, cat. no. 1, where it is believed to have been made by the order of the Qianlong Emperor to house the handscroll depicting the southern inspection tour of his grandfather, the Kangxi emperor. It is also mentioned in the Macao Museum of Art catalogue (p. 68) that the copper bolts of the body exactly match with the grooves of the lid so that the box can be securely locked. The Palace Museum box is of the same form and decoration as the present example, confirming that the twelve containers of the Kangxi Nanxun tu were identical and were both most likely produced during the Qianlong reign. It can then explain why both the Palace Museum scroll box and the present lot are attached with an old label reading Kangxi ye ('Grandfather Kangxi'). The tenth scroll box is incised with the date reading Kangxi ershiba nian sisi er yue ('Second month in the 28th year of the Kangxi period'), which is a month later than the date of the current lot, with the cyclic year mistakenly incised as sisi instead of jisi. That the very same error also appears on the present box suggests the possibility of the inscriptions on both boxes being carved by the same hand, or the cyclic year being directly copied from the same draft.

Another aspect worth noting is that this box would have been stored in the Shouhuang Dian within the Imperial Palace compound. According to Nie Chongzheng's study of the sixth scroll from the Kangxi Nanxun tu, sold in these rooms, 8th April 2010, lot 1824, Shouhuang Dian was the hall where all artwork with the Emperor's image was housed during the Qing dynasty. For more information see Nie Chongzheng, 'Viewing a Remnant of the Sixth Scroll of the Kangxi Emperor's Southern Tour', Sotheby's Catalogue, Hong Kong, 2010, pp. 92-95.

 

There are some examples of Qianlong lacquer decorated in this elegantly lavish manner known as the qianjin technique. It is a decorative method where the surface of the lacquer is incised with a tool, followed by the application of lacquer to the engraved lines which are then filled with gold leaf. The height of qianjin lacquer was during the Yuan and early Ming periods with records showing that imperial gifts from China to Japan in 1406 and 1433 included qianjin lacquer works. This confirms the existence of imperial patronage for works embellished in this technique which then continued to be used in the early period of the Qing dynasty under Qianlong's reign. Interestingly, lacquer boxes made to house court paintings of the Qianlong emperor's southern inspection tour were ordered by the Court from the lacquer workshops in Suzhou and were not made in the Palace Workshop. See a carved red-lacquer box for the S outhern Inspection Tour scrolls made circa 1776, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, published in Wen C. Fong and James C.Y. Watt, Possessing the Past, New York, 1996, fig. 177.

The Kangxi Nanxun tu was painted by court artist Wang Hui (1632-1717) and a number of others working under his supervision. It is a most impressive set of paintings which range in length between ten and 20 metres per scroll, and depict the spectacular occasion of Emperor Kangxi's trip in 1689. The Emperor embarked on his second inspection tour covering the southern regions of the nation in the first month of 1689. This extensive journey took 71 days and included visits to Mount Tai, the Yangtze and Yellow Rivers, the Grand Canal and a number of important urban centres in the south. Contemporary official chronicles heralded the tour as a great success, and claimed that it allowed the Emperor to fulfil his wish to review major river works, examine local customs and inquire about civiladministration. However, the main aim of the tour was to consolidate Manchu rule over the Han Chinese in the commercial and cultural centres of the Yangtze Delta region. During the tour Kangxi observed various functions and ritual ceremonies that served to enhance his image as a legitimate ruler while extending his control over the native
Chinese population.

The second scroll from the series, now in the collection of Museé Guimet, Paris, depicts the Emperor's tour in Shandong province, his visit from Pinyuan to the capital Jinan. The scroll is 1377 centimetres in length and illustrates the emperor and his vast entourage of soldiers, porters, officials wending their way to Jinan. Shandong was, and remains to this day, one of the most important and picturesque provinces in China. Mount Tai, the 'cosmic peak of the East' is one of its most sacred sites where Chinese rulers have worshipped for centuries. In fact, the third handscroll, now at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, shows the emperor's trip from Jinan to Mount Tai.

Wang Hui was especially talented in painting landscapes in a most graceful style and was known as one of the six great artists of the early Qing dynasty. He was commissioned in 1692 to commemorate the Emperor's epic journey, breaking down the tour in episodes which he personally designed and executed with a team of assistants. The project took more than six years to complete. After its completion Kangxi personally wrote the four characters Shan Shui Qing Hui (mountain and water are clear and bright) in praise of Wang's work, providing the opportunity for Wang to name himself Qinghui Zhuren ('The Master of Clarity and Brightness').

Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art. Hong Kong | 09 oct. 2012 www.sothebys.com 


Gerhard Richter (b. 1932) Abstraktes Bild

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Gerhard Richter (b. 1932) Abstraktes Bild. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2012

signed, numbered and dated '767-3 Richter 1992' (on the reverse); oil on canvas; 24 3/8 x 24 3/8in. (62 x 62cm.). Painted in 1992. Estimate £700,000 - £1,000,000. Price Realized £937,250

Provenance: Marian Goodman Gallery, New York.

Acquired from the above by the present owner in 1996.

 

Literature: B. Buchloch (ed.), Gerhard Richter, Werkübersicht/Catalogue Raisonné 1962-1993, vol. III, Ostfildern-Ruit 1993, no. 767-3 (illustrated in colour, unpaged).

Notes'For Richter, the squeegee is the most important implement for integrating coincidence into his art. For years, he used it sparingly, but he came to appreciate how the structure of paint applied with a squeegee can never be completely controlled. It thus introduces a moment of surprise that often enables him to extricate himself from a creative dead-end, destroying a prior, unsatisfactory effort and opening the door to a fresh start' (D. Elger, Gerhard Richter: A Life in Painting, Chicago 2009, p. 251).

With its lush striations of silvery grey and white interspersed with flecks and flashes of other colours, Abstraktes Bild shimmers like a mirage. Painted by Gerhard Richter in 1992, this Abstract Picture is deliberately elusive: forms veer towards focus and resolution, yet remain infinitely evasive. Indeed, when Richter paints his Abstract Pictures, he usually disrupts any elements that are approaching recognisable forms, preferring instead to create an image which is the result only of the various movements of paint that have led to its creation, change by change. Looking at Abstraktes Bild there is a sense of near iridescence to the smears and streaks of colour in the background, which have been pressed by squeegees and flattened, appearing like marbling and hinting their way through the veil-like strands of grey and white paint which dominate the composition.

For Richter, his free abstraction is the product of a long investigation into the possibilities of painting spanning more than five decades. Coming fullcircle from his early Tisch (1962) in which he cancelled his photorealist image with haptic swirls of grey paint, Richter began in the 1980s to freely overlay his canvases with colourful streaks and drags of pigment using his signature squeegee. As Dietmar Elger has observed, 'for Richter, the squeegee is the most important implement for integrating coincidence into his art. For years, he used it sparingly, but he came to appreciate how the structure of paint applied with a squeegee can never be completely controlled. It thus introduces a moment of surprise that often enables him to extricate himself from a creative dead-end, destroying a prior, unsatisfactory effort and opening the door to a fresh start' (D. Elger, Gerhard Richter: A Life in Painting, Chicago 2009, p. 251). This method was to find its purest articulation between 1989 and 1994 with paintings such asAbstraktes Bild created using confident gestures of the squeegee. Deconstructing the relationship between figure and ground, Richter was embracing the contingency of his medium, enjoying the effects of the spontaneous application of paint. As he once explained, 'it is a good technique for switching off thinking consciously, I can't calculate the result. But subconsciously, I can sense it. This is a nice 'between' state' (G. Richter quoted in ibid, p. 251).

Christie's. Post War and Contemporary Art Evening Auction. 11 October 2012. London, King Street

 

 

Le Cygne necklace by Wallace Chan

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Le Cygne necklace by Wallace Chan is a mystical scene captured in a range of precious materials including fancy coloured diamonds, sapphires and crystal. The natural crystal represents the water disturbed by the swan as it spreads its wings. The swan's body is titanium in which three diamonds are embedded, and underneath three diamonds smaller diamonds are cleverly placed to enhance brilliance.

An Ormolu And Paste-Set Striking And Musical Clock Qing Dynasty, Qianlong Period - Sotheby's

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An Ormolu And Paste-Set Striking And Musical Clock. Qing Dynasty, Qianlong Period - Photo Sotheby's

the richly gilt upright case of rectangular section resting on a square base with four splayed acanthus corner feet joined by stretchers adorned with entwined ribbons and florets, supported at each corner by columns picked out with striations and culmintating in furled acanthus leaves, further inset with alternating ruby-coloured and white brilliants along the edges, the central panel enclosing a painted 3 1/4-inch dial with both Roman and Arabic numerals and reticulated engraved gilt hands, the green and white paste-set bezel with convex glass further surrounded by an applied ruby and green-coloured beads frame, the sides pierced in openwork with an upright oval medallion of petalled flowers further decorated with red and green paste-set at each corner, the back arched door with lattice openwork, opening to reveal the principal three-day duration, five pillars, triple-chain fusees movement with verge escapement and hour striking on a bell, half-hour-passing strikes and two-tone music on eight bells, the back plates engraved with foliate stems and cornucopia, all below a pagoda roof finely incised with tassels and inset with paste-set florets, culminating with a bell tower enclosing a ten-bell carillon, two accompanying keys; 33 cm., 13 in. Estimation: 3,500,000 - 4,000,000 HKD - Lot. Vendu 3,380,000 HKD

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: The Qianlong emperor was an avid collector of timepieces and automatons and his enthusiasm for both European and Chinese-made clocks saw him assemble thousands of varying mesmerising and exquisitely novel designs. The great variety of media employed for the manufacturing of clocks is well illustrated in the Palace Museum, Beijing publication, The 200 Objects You Should Know. Timepieces, Beijing, 2007, including one of related architectural form and splayed feet, pl. 89. A closely related clock also in the Palace Museum, Beijing, is included in Lu Yangzhen, ed., Timepieces Collected by the Qing Emperors in the Palace Museum, Hong Kong, 1995, p. 170. Compare a richly embellished example of related form, from the Nezu Museum, Tokyo, sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 27th May 2008, lot
1511. 

Yang Boda, in the exhibition catalogue Tributes from Guangdong to the Qing Court, Hong Kong, 1987, pp. 55 and 63, notes that a large number of musical clocks were presented to the court by officials in Guangdong in the early and middle Qing period due to the great demand. He writes that ‘the Qing emperors lived and worked under the chimes of their clocks’ with a clock ‘in every hall, on every wall and on every table’. He suggests that while most of those presented for tribute between 1790 and 1794 were probably imported from London, some might have been assembled in Guangzhou, as some of the Guangzhou copies were so close to the European originals.

Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art. Hong Kong | 09 oct. 2012 www.sothebys.com 

Gerhard Richter (b. 1932), U.L.

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Gerhard Richter (b. 1932), U.L. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2012

signed, numbered and dated 'Richter 1985 579-3' (on the reverse); oil on canvas; 32 1/8 x 26¼in. (81.6 x 67.3cm.). Painted in 1985. Estimate £600,000 - £800,000. Price Realized £612,450

Provenance: Private Collection, Bern.

Marian Goodman Gallery, New York.

C&M Arts, New York.

Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2005.

Literature: J. Harten and D. Elger (eds.), Gerhard Richter: Paintings 1962-1985, Cologne 1986, no. 579-3 (illustrated in colour, p. 333).

B. Buchloch (ed.), Gerhard Richter, Werkübersitch/Catalogue Raisonné 1962-1993, voll. III, Ostfildern-Ruit 1993, no. 579-3 (illustrated in colour, unpaged).

Notes'A picture like this is painted in different layers, separated by intervals of time. The first layer mostly represents the background, which has a photographic, illusionistic look to it, though done without using a photograph. This first, smooth, soft-edged paint surface is like a finished picture; but after a while I decide that I understand it or have seen enough of it, and in the next stage of painting I partly destroy it, partly add to it; and so it goes on at intervals, till there is nothing more to do and the picture is finished. By then it is a Something which I understand in the same way it confronts me, as both incomprehensible and selfsufficient. An attempt to jump over my own shadow... At that stage the whole thing looks very spontaneous. But in between there are usually long intervals of time, and those destroy a mood. It is a highly planned kind of spontaneity' (G. Richter, 1984, quoted in H.-U. Obrist (ed.), Gerhard Richter: The Daily Practice of Painting. Writings and Interviews 1962-1993, D. Britt (trans), London, 1995, p. 112).

An explosion of reds and yellows, which streak across the canvas, U.L. is an incredibly dynamic example of Gerhard Richter's Abstract Pictures. This work was painted in 1985 and was therefore one of the most recent pictures to feature in the important monograph dedicated to the artist the following year. Accompanying his touring retrospective, that book included an authoritative catalogue raisonné of works completed before that time. U.L. was shown alongside three other works with a title comprising two initials named for notable art historians who were writing about Richter in 1985. Here the title U.L. is in direct reference to the art writer and curator Ulrich Loock, one of the collaborators on his important retrospective, and author of three catalogues on the artist in 1985. The three further works share in this dialogue: B.B. is named for Benjamin Buchloh who wrote a catalogue essay for Richter, C.B. refers to Coosje Van Bruggen who wrote a piece in Art Forum and D.Z. signifies Denys Zacharopoulos, who together with Ulrich Loock, published the seminal book on the artist Gerhard Richter in the same year. Through palimpsests of colour across the multilayered surface, the left hand side of the painting reveals glimpses of the smooth photo-realist blue skies beneath, requiring an almost archaeological investigation into the raw reduction of forms.

It was during the mid-1980s, when U.L. was painted, that Richter's abstract pictures garnered an increasing amount of international attention. Interest in his works was fuelled by the resurgence in painting that was occurring in the United States of America at the time. Richter's pictures appeared current and apt against the backdrop of these Neo-Expressionists. At the same time, in spirit they were diametrically opposed to much of the outpouring of energy of his contemporaries. Richter's pictures were controlled responses to the question: what to paint? In this sense, they were the next logical step in his progress from Photorealism. After all, one of his great epiphanies had occurred when, visiting Documenta 2 in 1959, Richter had seen the abstract pictures of Lucio Fontana and Jackson Pollock and had perceived the obsolescence of figurative painting in the modern era. Initially he exorcised that revelation by creating works based on 'arbitrary' photographs, using them as an almost silent armature that he would copy in order to continue painting. Gradually, though, he moved back towards abstraction, allowing himself to create pictures whose motifs would become slowly apparent as they evolved, brushstroke by brushstroke. U.L. demonstrates this perfectly, highlighting the extent to which Richter was a great pioneer and investigator of painting. As Der Spiegel wrote of his 1986 show: 'No one else has explored the potential of painting in an age of mass photography in as coolly engaged and intelligent a manner as he has, or has been as tough and ready to experiment as he is' (Der Spiegel, 1986, quoted in D. Elger, Gerhard Richter: A Life in Painting, E.M. Solaro (trans), Chicago & London, 2009, p. 264).

That influence of photography on Richter's work is emphasised in U.L. by the glimpse of a soft, sky-like blue in the background, behind the turbulent criss-crossing patterns of abstract brushwork and paint application. That hint of blue gives the impression that U.L. has been painted over one of Richter's own photographic works, although usually he instead used a foundation that was of a similar texture to those figurative images yet was actually abstract. This adds an extra tension and dynamism to the conceptual tug-of-war that is occurring in Richter's picture, as the motifs are effaced, obscured and finally evolve in a new light.

Christie's. Post War and Contemporary Art Evening Auction. 11 October 2012. London, King Street

Wallace Chan

An Extremely Rare And Fine Gold Thread 'Eight Emblems' Ceremonial Surcoat, Ma Gua Qing Dynasty, 18th Century - Sotheby's

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An Extremely Rare And Fine Gold Thread 'Eight Emblems' Ceremonial Surcoat, Ma Gua. Qing Dynasty, 18th Century - Photo Sotheby's

the waist-length garment opening in front with an overlap closing to the right, the rich gold-foiled satin ground meticulously worked and expertly embroidered in high relief gold-wrapped thread on the front and back with the 'Eight Auspicious Symbols of Buddhism' (bajixiang) namely the Wheel of Law (fa lun) flanked by the Standard of Victory (san) and the Endless Knot (panchang), under the Twin fish (yu) set above the left sleeve and the Conch (luo) set above the right, the reverse centred with the Lotus (hehua), below the Vase (guan) and the Parasol (gai), all springing above foliate lotus bases borne on elaborate strapworks, some of the emblems picked out with silver wires, occasionally stained in green, and red silk threads, the interior with white silk lining from neck to hem; width 152 cm., 59 7/8 in.; weight 4.72 kg. Estimation: 4,000,000 - 6,000,000 HKD. Unsold

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: This ma gua is notable for its bold design of the bajixiang which has been sumptuously embroidered onto the golden
satin in fine gold-wrapped thread. The luminescence and textural qualities of the tightly wrapped thread heightens its luxurious quality. As jackets of this type formed the outer layer of the Manchu wardrobe and would need to withstand the season and wear of activity, the delicacy and ornate Buddhist decoration of this piece suggests it may have been created for ceremonial use in Buddhist rituals. The technique of creating textiles with wrapped thread carefully held into place is known from as early as the Tang dynasty. Over 700 textiles were discovered in the crypt of the Famen temple pagoda, Fufeng, Shaanxi province (sealed in AD 874), including a miniature monk’s robe of kasaya-type decorated with floral motifs laid down in gold-wrapped thread, illustrated in Shelagh Vainker, Chinese Silk. A Cultural History, London, 2004, pl. 68.

Clothing decorated with the bajixiang are rare, although a yellow silk robe of the Huangtaiji period (r. 1626-43), from the Qing Court collection and still in Beijing, is illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum. Costumes and Accessories of the Qing Court, Hong Kong, 2005, pl. 5. See also a gold silk kasaya with a similarly bold bajixiang design pictured enclosing a gilt-bronze Buddha, published ibid., pl. 153, and a deep blue Zhang Zhou velvet jacket of this type with bajixiang medallions, pl. 137.

 

The ma gua, literally ‘horse jacket’, was a waist-length coat worn by Manchu horsemen and by officials with informal dress even within the palace when transacting everyday business. Normally made of a dark blue fabric, generals and captains of all Manchu, Mongol and Chinese banners were permitted to wear ma gua in the colour appropriate to their regiment when in personal attendance upon the emperor. The yellow ma gua was bestowed upon the highest-ranking ministers and officers of the imperial bodyguard. According to the General Charles Gordon, one of only two European recipients of the yellow jacket for his part in the suppression of the Taiping Rebellion (1850-64), ‘When the Manchu dynasty conquered China, the leader of the invaders feared assassination, so he clothed 40 of his bodyguards in yellow like himself. This precaution by time became unnecessary, and the Emperor then turned the yellow jacket into a decoration for military service. There are accordingly 40 mandarins allowed to wear the yellow jacket; no one else but the Emperor and the 40 can wear yellow’ (see Gary Dickinson and Linda Wrigglesworth, Imperial Wardrobe, Berkeley, 2000, p. 116). A yellow ma gua pictured together with a full set of clothing is illustrated ibid, pl. 98.

Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art. Hong Kong | 09 oct. 2012 www.sothebys.com 

Anselm Kiefer (b. 1945), Aphrodite

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Anselm Kiefer (b. 1945), Aphrodite. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2012

titled in Greek 'Aphrodite' (upper right); oil, emulsion, shellac, resin, plaster, wire and sunflowers on canvas; 75 3/8 x 110 1/8in. (191.5 x 280cm.). Executed in 2004. Estimate £450,000 - £650,000. Price Realized £529,250

Provenance: Heiner Bastian Fine Arts, Berlin.

Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2008.

Notes'I can only make my feelings, thoughts and will in the paintings. I make them as precise as I can and then after that you decide what the pictures are and what I am' (A. Kiefer, quoted in Anselm Kiefer für Chlebnikov, exh. cat., White Cube, London 2005, p. 22).

A vast canvas depicting a swirling maelstrom of turbulent, wrathful sea, adorned with a bundle of ethereal white sunflowers, Aphrodite offers richly nuanced exploration of the themes of history, myth and poetry that have characterised much of Anselm Kiefer's oeuvre. Executed in 2004, Aphrodite is closely related to the series of dramatic seascapes entitled Velimir Chlebnikov and the Sea exhibited in a pavilion specially designed by the artist at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in 2006. Chlebnikov, whom the paintings were dedicated to, was a Futurist poet and mystical theorist whose esoteric ideas included the notion that climactic naval battles would occur every 317 years, its consequences of paramount cosmic significance for the course of human affairs.

Aphrodite was inspired by the eponymous Greek goddess. More commonly known for her other role as goddess of love, Aphrodite was also a sea goddess, a war deity and a patron of sailors. Kiefer has inscribed her name in white paint in Greek on the top right corner of the painting, whilst the foam and dark turgid water offers an allusion to her birth from the foam of the sea. Aphrodite's immensely textured painterly surface is a synthesis of the Romantic tradition, recalling the seascapes of artist's such as Caspar David Friedrich, and Abstract Expressionist painting's gestural approach to the sublime.

Drawing on the theme of war throughout time via ancient mythology and avant-garde poetry, Kiefer navigates between the difficult terrains of the necessity of remembrance and the possibility of transcendence. Chlebnikov, like Kiefer, rejected the idea of history and time as a linear, teleological process. In Aphrodite, time relates as much to the myth of the past as it foretells of the future: the overcast horizon at one with the turgid, restless sea, could be interpreted as the aftermath of a cataclysm, the healing of history with time, and the rebirth after the destruction of war, or indeed, it could be perceived as the forewarning of an imminent apocalyptic warfare. This ambiguity of interpretation is enhanced by the presence of the enigmatic white sunflowers, which could be read as the death of peace, or an ode to a new beginning and a remembrance to the fallen.

Kiefer is engaged in a relentless interweaving and reworking of themes that often intersect with one another, finding new articulation in different media and objects. His works are resistant to single interpretations, instead facilitating patterns of associations. Indeed, as the artist himself has said, 'I can only make my feelings, thoughts and will in the paintings. I make them as precise as I can and then after that you decide what the pictures are and what I am' (A. Kiefer, quoted in Anselm Kiefer für Chlebnikov, exh. cat., White Cube, London 2005, p. 22).

Christie's. Post War and Contemporary Art Evening Auction. 11 October 2012. London, King Street


The Grandeur ring by Wallace Chan

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The Grandeur ring by Wallace Chan.

Note how there is not metal visible thanks to Chan's innovative settings that abutt the stones to each other and hold them in place. The 19 ct yellow diamond is surrounded by rods of emerald, white diamonds and jadeite. The ring echoes traditional Chinese architecture with three distinctive characteristics: upturned eaves, brackets and ornaments.

Paire de chaises à dossiers plats, en hêtre mouluré, sculpté et doré. Epoque Empire

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Paire de chaises à dossiers plats, en hêtre mouluré, sculpté et doré. Epoque Empire. Photo Pousse Cornet - Valoir

Les dossiers et traverses ornées de rosaces, palmettes et fleurons. Pieds avant fuselés à étranglement et arqués à l'arrière. Une estampillée Jacob D. rue Meslée. Petits accidents et usures à la dorure. Garniture de soie cerise à motifs de couronnes laurées et vase. Hauteur : 93,5cm ; largeur : 51,5cm ; profondeur : 50cm. Estimation : 5 000 / 7 000 €

Une suite de quatre chaises quasi-identiques, mais en bois peint, fait partie d'un mobilier de salon livré par le tapissier Darrac en 1810 pour la chambre de Napoléon au Grand Trianon et qui peut être rattaché à l'œuvre de Jacob-Desmalter (voir D. Ledoux-Lebard, le Grand Trianon, Meubles et objets d'art, Editions F. de Nobele, Paris, 1975, p.159).

Expert: Cabinet Dillee. Pousse Cornet - Valoir. Dimanche 14 octobre 2012. Hôtel des Ventes - 32, avenue Maunoury - 41000 Blois. Tel. (+33) 2.54.78.45.58 - pousse.cornet@wanadoo.fr

A Rare Red Lacquer Foliate-Rimmed Dish. Southern Song Dynasty, 13th Century - Sotheby's

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A Rare Red Lacquer Foliate-Rimmed Dish. Southern Song Dynasty, 13th Century - Photo Sotheby's

the delicately-lobed and rounded sides rising from a recessed base to a barbed rim divided into eight bracket foliations, the interior with radiating ribs extending from a slight recess of conforming shape in the centre, applied overall with a rich crimson-red lacquer, except for the base and the broad footring lacquered in black; 21.2 cm., 8 3/8 in. Estimation: 1,800,000 - 2,500,000 HKD. Unsold

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: Plain lacquer wares of the Song dynasty are amongst the most beautiful and delicate pieces known in this media. The present dish is striking for its deep red colour and simple yet elegant organic form. It is not only most pleasing to the eye but is also surprisingly light and thin when held in one's hand. This dish is the work of a highly skilled craftsman who has created a masterpiece that represents the refined taste of the Song elite literati.

A very similar eight-lobed red lacquer dish, from the Sedgwick collection, was sold in our London rooms, 15th October1968, lot 56. Compare also a slightly smaller six-lobed dish of this type with a black lacquer base illustrated in Lee Yukuan, Oriental Lacquer Art, Tokyo, 1972, p. 118, pl. 52, where it is noted that the two characters on the base represent the alias of a man who apparently withdrew from society to study and meditate. A rare brownish-black eight lobed lacquer dish, from a noble Japanese family collection formed prior to World War II, was offered in these rooms, 8th October 2010, lot 2638; and a seven-lobed red lacquer dish (or perhaps a stand), from the Dubosc collection, was included in the Eskenazi exhibition Chinese Lacquer from the Jean-Pierre Dubosc Collection and Others, London, 1992, cat. no. 8.

Further examples of undecorated Song dynasty lacquer dishes of varying lobed form were included in the exhibition So Gen no bijutsu, Nezu Institute of Fine Arts, Tokyo, 2004, cat. nos. 17-20. Eight-lobed lacquer dishes continued to be popular during the Yuan dynasty, when they were carved with the popular 'bird and flower' design; for example, see a slightly larger dish carved with the 'peacock and peony' motif included in the Special Exhibition of Palace Lacquer Objects, National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1981, cat. no. 5. 

Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art. Hong Kong | 09 oct. 2012 www.sothebys.com 

Wallace Chan. "Polaris Light".

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Wallace Chan. "Polaris Light". Diamond, Ruby, Red Spinel, Titanium @ 2012 Wallace Chan

Ecole florentine, vers 1600. Suiveur d'Alessandro Allori, Portrait d'Eleonora de Medicis

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Ecole florentine, vers 1600. Suiveur d'Alessandro Allori, Portrait d'Eleonora de Medicis. Photo Artcurial - Briest-Poulain-F.Tajan 

Huile sur toile; 61 x 51 cm (23,79 x 19,89 in.). Estimation : 2 000 / 3 000 €

Artcurial - Briest-Poulain-F.Tajan. Mercredi 17 octobre 2012. Drouot Richelieu - 9, rue Drouot - Salle 1 - 75009 Paris www.artcurial.com

A Finely Cast Gilt-Bronze Mirror Stand in the Form of a Hare. Song Dynasty - Sotheby's

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A Finely Cast Gilt-Bronze Mirror Stand in the Form of a Hare. Song Dynasty - Photo Sotheby's

cast recumbent crouching on its four legs, its raised head turned sharply to the left detailed with alert eyes, flared nostrils and divided upper lip, its long ears reclining behind, wearing a choker suspending a small bell and grasping in its mouth a long spray of trefoil leaves curling over to form a receptacle on its back, further supporting a circular Song dynasty bronze mirror decorated with flowers issuing from cragged rocks. Quantité: 2; length 22.5 cm., 8 7/8 in. diameter of the mirror 13.3 cm., 5 1/4 in. Estimation: 1,800,000 - 2,500,000 HKD. Unsold

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: Gilt-bronze mirror stands of the Song dynasty are extremely rare, and even more unusual are those in the form of a hare. The mirror, with its disc form, represents the moon. The hare and the moon together recall the ancient Chinese tale of the Jade Rabbit who resides on the moon and continuously makes the elixir of life for his companion, the Moon Goddess Chang’e.

A bronze mirror stand attributed to the Song or Yuan periods, in the form of a mythical single-horned animal called xiniu, from the Salting bequest and now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, is illustrated in Rose Kerr, Later Chinese Bronzes, London, 1990, pl. 87 and on the front cover, where the author mentions that mirrors were often mounted on stands and thus form part of stationary dressing-tables as seen on paintings showing ladies making-up before such mounted mirrors (see ibid., p. 103).

Animal form stands continued to be popular in the later dynasties; for example, see an early Qing period finely cast silver stand, in the shape of a crouching lion, sold in these rooms, 26th October 1993, lot 316.

Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art. Hong Kong | 09 oct. 2012 www.sothebys.com

A Rutilated Quartz and Gold Pendant and Pendant-Brooch, by Wallace Chan

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A Rutilated Quartz and Gold Pendant and Pendant-Brooch, by Wallace Chan. Photo Christies Image Ltd 2010.

Each designed as a rutilated quartz plaque delicately carved with a Japanese crane on a pine tree depicting the symbol of longevity, within a pavé-set diamond undulating surround, mounted in 18k gold, pendant/brooch 4.8 cm, pendant 5.0 cm long. Signed Wallace Chan (2). Estimate HK$40,000 - HK$64,000. Price Realized HK$62,500


John Astley (Wem, 1727 - Dukinfield Lodge, 1787), Portrait du jeune Peter John Fremeaux

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John Astley (Wem, 1727 - Dukinfield Lodge, 1787), Portrait du jeune Peter John Fremeaux. Photo Artcurial - Briest-Poulain-F.Tajan

Toile; 127 x 101 cm (49,53 x 39,39 in.). Estimation : 2 000 / 3 000 €

Artcurial - Briest-Poulain-F.Tajan. Mercredi 17 octobre 2012. Drouot Richelieu - 9, rue Drouot - Salle 1 - 75009 Paris www.artcurial.com

A Large Celadon Jade Ruyi Sceptre. Qing Dynasty, 18th Century

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A Large Celadon Jade Ruyi Sceptre. Qing Dynasty, 18th Century - Photo Sotheby's

the ruyi-shaped terminal carved with a crowned Buddha under a tasseled parasol, seated in lalisatana on a lotus base, his hands in dhyanasana mudra, a scarf billowing around his shoulders, flanked by two hovering bats grasping beribboned endless knots in their mouths, the arched shaft finely incised on the front and reverse as well as all sides with shou characters arranged vertically in columns and further picked out in gilt, the ruyi-shaped end carved with a caparisoned elephant carrying an archaistic vase decorated with a yin-yang symbol and incised with a bat on the reverse, the bottom edge further pierced for threading a tassel, the smoothly polished stone of an even pale celadon tone, carved wood stand; 45 cm., 17 3/4 in. Estimation: 100,000 - 120,000 HKD. Lot. Vendu 2,060,000 HKD

PROVENANCE: Rare Art, New York (according to label).

Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art. Hong Kong | 09 oct. 2012 www.sothebys.com

An Exquisite Coloured Diamond and Multi-Gem Butterfly Clip Brooch, by Wallace Chan

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An Exquisite Coloured Diamond and Multi-Gem Butterfly Clip Brooch, by Wallace Chan. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2007

Designed as a butterfly, the body set with a cushion-shaped tsavorite garnet and vari-cut yellow diamonds, to the butterfly specimen wings encased in carved rock crystal with mother-of-pearl back, enhanced by brilliant-cut yellow to brown diamond trim and accents, mounted in titanium, 6.5 x 8.5 cm. Signed Wallace for Wallace Chan. Estimate HK$450,000 - HK$650,000. Price Realized HK$727,500

Christie's. Magnificent Jewellery & Jadeite Jewellery. 28 November 2007. Hong Kong

Rembrandt, Van Dyck, Gainsborough: The Treasures of Kenwood House, London stops in Milwaukee

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Rembrandt van Rijn, Portrait of the Artist, ca. 1665. Oil on canvas, 47 x 45 in. Kenwood House, English Heritage, England (88028836) Photo courtesy American Federation of Arts.

MILWAUKEE, WIS.- Yesterday, the Milwaukee Art Museum opened Rembrandt, Van Dyck, Gainsborough: The Treasures of Kenwood House, London, an exhibition of forty-eight masterpieces on tour from the Iveagh Bequest collection. Most of the paintings have never traveled to the States before, and many of them have rarely been seen outside London’s Kenwood House. The exhibition is organized by the American Federation of Arts and English Heritage.

A magnificent painting collection known as the Iveagh Bequest resides at Kenwood House, a neoclassical villa in London that Scottish architect Robert Adam remodeled in the eighteenth century. Donated to the nation by Edward Cecil Guinness, 1st Earl of Iveagh (1847–1927) and heir to the world’s most successful brewery, the collection was shaped by the tastes of the Belle Époque—Europe’s equivalent to America’s Gilded Age—when the earl shared the cultural stage and art market with other industry titans such as the Rothschilds, J. Pierpont Morgan, and Henry Clay Frick. The earl’s purchases, made mainly between 1887 and 1891, reveal a taste for the portraiture, landscape, and seventeenth-century Dutch and Flemish works that could typically be found in English aristocratic collections.

It is an honor to collaborate with Kenwood House and with the American Federation of Arts, to host this exquisite collection of masterworks,” said Daniel Keegan, director of the Milwaukee Art Museum. “This priceless collection holds significance the world-over, and again, it speaks volumes about our Museum, and the reputation it has established internationally, that Rembrandt, Van Dyck, Gainsborough: The Treasures of Kenwood House, London is coming to Milwaukee.”

Among the works on view are Rembrandt's sublime Portrait of the Artist (ca. 1665), Anthony van Dyck’s Princess Henrietta of Lorraine Attended by a Page (1634), Thomas Gainsborough’s Mary, Countess Howe (ca. 1764), Frans Hals’s Pieter van den Broecke (1633), and Joshua Reynolds’s Lady Louisa Manners (1779).

These artists were inspired by Europe’s rich seascapes and landscapes and aristocratic elegance,” said Keegan. “The works are exceptional, sumptuous, and speak to the heart of the eighteenth-century Golden Age.”

While the exhibition is on tour, Kenwood House is being refurbished; the villa will reopen in late 2013.

The exhibition is curated by Susan Jenkins, together with her colleagues at English Heritage, the government's lead advisory body for the historic environment in England.

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Joseph Mallord William Turner, A Coast Scene with Fishermen Hauling a Boat Ashore ("The Iveagh Sea-Piece"), ca. 1803-04. Oil on canvas, 36 1/8 x 48 1/4 in. Kenwood House, English Heritage, England (88028820) Photo courtesy American Federation of Arts

Asian Art Week at Christie's London to offer a diverse array of rare and beautiful works

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A fine Yoshitsune-Gote do-maru Armour. Estimate: £100,000-150,000. Photo: Christie's Images Ltd 2012

LONDON.- Christie’s will celebrate Asian Art in London this autumn between 6 – 9 November, with a diverse array of rare and beautiful works with excellent provenance and many highlights from important private collections. The sales include: Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art on 6 November at King Street; and at South Kensington: Interiors – dedicated to Chinese Art – and The Japanese Aesthetic on 7 November; and Chinese Ceramics, Works of Art and Textiles on 9 November.

Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art: 6 November at 10.30am & 2.00pm, Christie’s King Street - Bid via Christie’s LIVE
Christie’s London Asian Art week in autumn 2012 opens with a stellar offering of Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art on 6 November. A selection of exquisite works from a Private English Collection and Property from the Michael D. Stevenson Collection will be offered alongside notable ceramics, jade carvings, bronzes, cloisonné enamel, lacquer ware, painting and furniture. The sale features over 300 works which demonstrate the incredible breadth and dynamism of Chinese art, spanning the Neolithic period through to the 20th century. With estimates ranging from £1,000 to £700,000 the sale is expected to realise in excess of £10 million.

Meeting the current markets continuing demand for the finest Jades, the sale is led by a remarkable very rare yellow jade archaistic conjoined double-bi form ornament, Qianlong period (1736-1795), which was formerly in the renowned collection of J.T. Tai (estimate: £500,000-700,000). This pair of archaistic yellow jade hinged bi discs is a rare example of the lapidary's art incorporating not only surface carving, but also loose, pierced decorative plaques in the centers of both the discs, as well as reticulated dragon extensions which are joined with a tubular section - all carved from a single piece of nephrite. Such tours de forces of jade carving with pierced and linked sections appear to have emerged in the Eastern Zhou dynasty (770-221 BC), and the current example combines archaism relating to that period with Qing dynasty stylistic innovation. The specific inspiration for the current example is a similarly-sized pair of linked jade bi discs in the collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing.

Other examples include a large finely carved pale celadon jade boulder Qianlong period (1736-1795) depicting a scholar accompanied by an attendant on one side; the stone is of an even pale tone with attractive russet areas (estimate: £50,000 - 80,000). It has been the property of a distinguished English family since the early 20th century.

Property from a Private English Collection comprises further jade carvings dating primarily to the Qianlong period (1736-1795). High quality and good condition were factors of paramount importance in the careful formation of this collection over 30 years, with important works mainly sourced from top London dealers. Jade carvings have consistently appealed to English collectors since the early 20th century and this collection features a good selection, including a small 18th/19th century evenly toned white jade brush washer, attractively carved with numerous chilong amongst swirling waves around a central aperture (estimate: £30,000 - 50,000). Further examples with notable provenance include a rare large longquan celadon model of a pagoda, Ming dynasty, 15th century (estimate: £15,000-20,000) from the collection of Michael D. Stevenson, a north American based collector who built his collection from the 1970’s through the 1990’s. This collection features a variety of media also including glass, gilt bronze, lacquer and porcelain which are also offered in the sale.

The rich offering of Cloisonné enamels is led by the second most valuable lot in the sale, a rare massive imperially-inscribed vase, Hu, Qianlong Period (1736-1795) measuring 27½ in. (70 cm.) high from the Property of an Asian Collector (estimate: £400,000 - 600,000). Exceptional both for its size and fine quality decoration, the vase is inscribed with an Imperial poem written by the famous calligrapher and painter Huang Yi (1744-1802). The poem, describing the subtle movement of the birds and the trees and eulogising the simple pleasures that nature provides, is recorded in the Yuzhi shiji (Imperial Poetry Collection).

From the Property of a European Gentleman, a rare large cloisonné enamel fish basin, Qianlong period (1736-1795) is a particularly attractive example attributed to the Imperial workshops. The choice of motif is highly auspicious: fish have remained a popular theme in the Chinese decorative arts and convey a range of auspicious messages, most of them based upon the sound of the word. The word for fish itself (yu) sounds like the word for abundance or surplus. Thus two or more fish represent multiplied abundance and gold fish (jinyu) suggest an abundance of gold. On the exterior a number of different motifs suggesting longevity have been combined, including deer, cranes and pine trees (estimate: £100,000 - 150,000).

This is the first London sale in the category to feature a section dedicated to Religious art, presenting stunning works representing two main religions in particular: Buddhism and Daoism which highlight that Chinese religious beliefs throughout the centuries have developed a frequently used wide set of rich iconography and art in China.

Praying to figural models, portraits of the gods and deities, was seen as an effective way to invoke their power and effect real change in everyday life. In Buddhist tradition, the creation and reproduction of images of the Buddha and Bodhisattvas is also intrinsically linked with devotional intent and the notion of merit. By making and offering such images, the pious believe that they are gaining merit and accumulating good deeds and acts that carry over to the next world or life.

Examples are led by a superb 18th century parcel-gilt bronze repoussé figure of Maitreya (estimate: £80,000-120,000); and a rare large gilt-bronze figure of the Daoist guardian figure Wang Lingguan, late Ming dynasty, 16th/17th century, offered from a private European Collection (estimate: £60,000-80,000). The figure is powerfully cast and modelled with a third eye above the bulging eyes and a flaring beard, his face has a wrathful expression.

Exemplifying the beauty of fine Chinese ceramics, highlights include a blue and white moonflask, Baoyueping, Qianlong (1736-1795) of impressive proportions – measuring 19½ in. (49.5 cm.) high – with Bajixiang decoration in rich cobalt blue tones (estimate: £200,000-300,000). A finely painted famille rose Turquoise ground vase, dates to the Daoguang period (1821-1850) which inherited the fine quality of potting and enamelling perfected during the Qianlong reign (1736-1795) (estimate: £150,000-200,000). It is elaborately decorated with auspicious symbols, including bats, lotus blooms, ‘wan’ symbols, lanterns and ‘ruyi’ heads. Bats symbolise happiness and blessings, the lotus form one of the Eight Buddhist Emblems, lanterns represent abundance, and ruyi provide a homophone for the Chinese saying `may your wishes come true.’ A rare Wucai circular box and cover, Wanli period (1573-1619) demonstrates exuberance of colour and design seen among imperial polychrome porcelains in the Wanli reign (estimate: 80,000 - 120,000). Round boxes with bud-shaped finials found considerable favour in the Wanli reign, and a very similarly decorated box to the current example is in the collection of the Idemitsu Museum of Arts, Tokyo.

Emperors, members of the literati and academic individuals throughout Chinese history have greatly appreciated scholarly objects which not only enriched a cultured learned environment, but also provided a source of meditation and inspiration. Ornamental and functional objects for the scholar’s desk, including brush washers, brush pots, seal paste boxes and Yixing pottery, often reflected and defined the taste of the individual.

This auction features a fascinating array of such works led by a particularly charming small 18th century gilt-bronze and champlevé enamel 'prunus' brush pot, from a private English collection, (estimate: £30,000-50,000). The Prunus plants depicted are extremely auspicious, and hold a special place in Chinese literature and art. The first flower to bloom in late winter and early spring, it symbolises endurance and hope. A Huanghuali cylindrical brush pot, Bitong, 18th century is offered from The Capelo Collection (estimate: £20,000-30,000). This type of wood is extremely popular for its appearance and patina, exhibiting a rich golden-brown colour. A delicately decorated small rare Yixing slip-painted circular box and cover, Qianlong period (1736-1795) would have been used by scholars as a seal paste box (estimate:£10,000 - 15,000).

An impressive 18th century tiger-maple four-poster canopy bed, Jiazichuang (estimate: £150,000 - 180,000) leads the furniture offered. Formerly part of the Gangolf Geis Collection of Fine Chinese Furniture, it has been suggested that it was most likely made for a man's apartment, whilst a six-poster 'wedding bed', often a dowry item brought into the marriage with the bride, would be more likely to be made for a woman’s quarters.

Chinese Interiors: 7 November at 10.00am, Christie’s South Kensington Bid via Christie’s LIVE
An established and extremely popular feature of Christie’s Asian Art Week in London is the Interiors sale, dedicated to Chinese Art, held at South Kensington. Offering collectors affordable works of art dating from the Neolithic period through to the 20th century, the auction on Wednesday 7 November will include bronzes, jade, porcelain, cloisonné enamels, snuff bottles, paintings, textiles and more.

The sale presents an array of works from important private collections including The Burton Collection of Chinese Works of Art, A Private English Collection of Cloisonné, A Private Welsh Collection of Chinese Ceramics, A Private Collection of a European Family and A Private East Asian Collection of Early Jades. The sale comprises more than 480 lots, with estimates starting at just £500. Highlights include a Chinese white-glazed jar and cover, Tang dynasty (618-907) from the private collection of a European family (estimate: £2,000-3,000); and a Chinese Jade carving from a Private East Asian Collection (estimate: £1,000-1,500).

The Japanese Aesthetic: 7 November at 10.30am & 2.30pm, Christie’s South Kensington Bid via Christie’s LIVE
The sale of The Japanese Aesthetic, on 7 November, encapsulates the extraordinarily powerful designs of Japanese domestic and export works of art ranging from 13th century swords from the battle torn years of the Muromachi period to the elegant and dynamic designs by metalworkers in the Meiji period (late 19th century), for export to the west. Featuring over 450 lots, the sale includes a private collection of swords, a group of armours from a private western collection and a group of ceramics from a private English collection by the renowned St. Ives potter Bernard Leach and his circle. Further highlights include ukiyo-e prints including the famous Sanka hakuu [Shower Below the Summit] from the series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji by Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) (estimate: £25,000-30,000) and a private American collection of lacquer. With estimates ranging from £800 to £180,000, the auction is expected to realise in the region of £2million.

The sale presents one of the best groups of armour to come to the market in recent decades, comprising five magnificent examples befitting the daimyo of Edo period Japan and their high ranking retainers. Offered from the property of a private western collector and in fantastic condition, they are led by a fine Yoshitsune-Gote do-maru Armour (estimate: £100,000-150,000). Elsewhere in the sale, a highlight among the swords and sword fittings is a Bizen Ichimonji tachi-style Japanese sword blade attributed to the 13th century Kamakura period Fukuoka Ichimonji school (estimate: £60,000-80,000).

A fine example of metalwork is a rare example by the artist Shoami Katsuyoshi (1832-1908). The elegant iron and gilt and patinated bronze decorated kabin [flower vase] signed Dai Nihon Okayama Shoami kizamu, dates to the Meiji Period (late 19th century) and is in the form of a gourd entwined with vine, leaves, a frog and snake (estimate: £120,000-180,000). This extraordinary piece of metalwork reflects the type produced by late 19th century Japanese metalwork when the decline of the samurai led sword and metalworkers to produce alternative works to showcase their skills. Another example of high quality late 19th century Japanese metalwork is an inlaid iron vase and cover, in gold, silver, shibuichi and copper depicting pheasants and insects among flowers beside a stream, the cover with insects among flowers and grasses, surmounted by a finial in the form of a kirin (estimate: £40,000-50,000).

Following the success of an extremely rare pair of late 17th century Kakiemon tigers in May, which realised £169,250, Edo Period domestic and export ceramics from the mid-17th/early 18th century again present a highlight in the form of a rare pair of Kakiemon models of karashishi. They are believed to be a previously unrecorded model, possibly made for a temple (estimate: £120,000-150,000).

2012 marks Bernard Leach’s 125th anniversary. Works by Leach and his circle which are offered from a private English Collection provide a rare opportunity for collectors and institutions. Renowned as the father of studio pottery and leader of the revival of traditional handmade pottery in England, Leach was born in Hong Kong and went on to live in Japan during his early adult years.

Whilst in Japan Leach began potting and became friends with the potter Shoji Hamada (1894 - 1978) who went on to travel to England with him, where they set up the Leach Pottery at St. Ives, Cornwall in 1920. Together they promoted pottery as a combination of Western and Eastern arts and philosophies. Characteristic highlights of great charm include a rare, late 1920s large pie-crust earthenware dish decorated with an onion seller (estimate: £5,000-7,000) and examples of Shoji Hamada’s work such as a stoneware vase with red clay body incised with a band of floral patterns, made at the St. Ives Pottery 1920-1923 (estimate: £6,000-8,000), alongside Leach’s drawings and etchings.

The art of lacquer is celebrated in a Private American Collection of Lacquer which presents examples from the 18th and 19th centuries. Featuring writing boxes, inro and incense boxes, highlights include an attractive Kodansu [Small Cabinet] decorated with chrysanthemums by a stream in gold and silver lacquer, with hinged door opening to reveal three small drawers decorated with autumn leaves, Edo Period (19th century) (estimate: £4,000-6,000).

A group of lacquer from the ingenious artist Shibata Zeshin (1807-1891) and his pupils includes a lacquer bon [tray] decorated with auspicious symbols and signed Zeshin and Taishin (Ikeda Taishin 1825-1903) (estimate: £15,000-20,000) and an album of six miniature fan paintings depicting birds, fruit and flowers, each signed Zeshin and sealed, and dated 1869 (estimate: £8,000-10,000).

Chinese Ceramics, Works of Art and Textiles: 9 November at 10am & 2pm, Christie’s South Kensington - Bid via Christie’s LIVE
Christie’s South Kensington sale of Chinese Ceramics, Works of Art and Textiles on 9 November features over 300 lots spanning two millenia of Chinese art from the early centuries BC through to the 20th century, with estimates ranging from £1,000 to £20,000. The carefully curated sale offers a diverse selection of porcelain, jade carvings, bronzes, silver, cloisonné, lacquer, bamboo, furniture, paintings, snuff bottles and textiles. The sale is expected to fetch in the region of £1.5 million.

The auction includes several private collections of jade, porcelain and snuff bottles including The Roden Family Collection of 20th Century Porcelain, led by an exquisitely painted famille rose ‘landscape’ vase, cong, dated to the sixth year of the Republic corresponding to 1917 and with a Juren Tang mark (estimate £10,000-15,000). Unusually, the vase has been signed by Guo Baochang, the Superintendant of Ceramics, and is likely to have been made as tribute for China’s last imperial monarch, Yuan Shikai, who reigned for less than 100 days.

Jade highlights include a Ming dynasty (1368-1644) grey jade model of the Daoist immortal Zhen Wu seated on a carved wood stand (estimate £10,000-15,000). The figure is carved with a pointed beard and long hair that falls loosely down his back. The carvers have cleverly incorporated the lighter grey tones of the jade to delineate his face and upper body with his lower body fashioned from the darker grey tones. It has a fascinating early provenance having been acquired by the family of the UK private vendor in 1950 from the celebrated London dealer Louis Joseph for £94, a princely sum at the time.

Also of note are the jade carvings from a Private East Asian Collection predominantly formed in the 1980s and 1990s in Hong Kong. Among the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) highlights are the two animated boys (estimate: £4,000-6,000).

Christie’s will offer The Stan Barden Collection of Snuff Bottles assembled in Hong Kong from 1960 to 1981 that includes all manner of glass, porcelain, amber, jade and hardstone bottles, including two 18th/19th century shadow agate bottles (estimate £2,000-3,000). Stan Barden, who was founder member number one of the International Snuff Bottle Society in Hong Kong, was particularly drawn to agate bottles.

Ceramic highlights from important private collections include a slender blue and white vase depicting a scene from The Romance of The Three Kingdoms and dating circa 1630-50 from the Cornelia and George (1911-1989) Wingfield Digby Collection (estimate: £5,000-8,000).

The textile section is led by a small collection of robes ‘Sold to Benefit the Brooklyn Museum’, with estimates ranging from £2,000 to £8,000; an interesting collection of Rank Badges from a Private Collection; a strong group of delicate 18th and 19th century fans painted with views of Hong Kong and Whampoa; a formal court robe (chao’fu), worn to the most important ceremonies in the Imperial palace (estimate: £10,000-15,000), along with a large yellow canopy embroidered with dragons, which probably graced an important Mandarin’s audience room, as the Emperor’s representative in the provinces (estimate: £15,000-20,000).

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A remarkable very rare yellow jade archaistic conjoined double-bi form ornament, Qianlong period (1736-1795), which was formerly in the renowned collection of J.T. Tai. Estimate: £500,000-700,000. Photo: Christie's Images Ltd 2012

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