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A rare Chinese 'oilspot' black-glazed bowl, Jin dynasty (1115-1234)

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A rare Chinese 'oilspot' black-glazed bowl, Jin dynasty (1115-1234)

A rare Chinese 'oilspot' black-glazed bowl, Jin dynasty (1115-1234)

Lot 55. A rare Chinese 'oilspot' black-glazed bowl, Jin dynasty (1115-1234). Diam. 11.7 cm. Estimate: €5,000.00 - €8,000.00. © AAG.

The conical body covered to the interior with a lustrous black glaze suffused with a pattern of silver-coloured oil spots, continuing over the rim stopping short to reveal a layer of brown glaze ending above the foot, revealing the sand coloured buff with black mark

Provenance: - Michael Willcox, London (2004)
- Collection Drs. Koos de Jong, Amsterdam.
Compare- [cat.] Black Porcelain from the Yeung Wing Tak collection, Hong Kong 1997, no. 81, p. 167
- [exhib.cat.] Song Ceramics from the Kwan Collection, Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong 1994, no. 158, p. 353
- [exhib.cat.] Hare's Fur, Tortoiseshell, and Partridge Feathers. Chinese brown- and black-glaze ceramics, 400-1400 (ed. R.D. Mowry), Harvard University Art Museums, Cambridge (MA) 1996, no. 43a-b, p. 149 and no. 46, p. 153
- R. Kerr, Song Ceramics, V&A Museum, London 2004, no. 83 - 84, p. 83.
 
Art d'Asie comprenant la collection du Drs Koos de Jong - Partie 1 chez AAG (Arts & Antiques Group), Amsterdam, le 05 Novembre 2018 à 14h00.

A rare Chinese Junyao censer, Jin dynasty (1115-1234)

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A rare Chinese Junyao censer, Jin dynasty (1115-1234)

A rare Chinese Junyao censer, Jin dynasty (1115-1234)

Lot 58. A rare Chinese Junyao censer, Jin dynasty (1115-1234). Diam. 10.7 cm. Estimate: €5,000.00 - €8,000.00. © AAG.

The cylindrical sides raised on a short ring-shaped foot, covered with a thick opaque glaze of a pale blue tone thinning to mushroom at the rim, the interior left unglazed and the glaze stopping short above the foot, revealing the sand-coloured buff

Provenance: - Robert Mc Pherson, London (2000)
- Collection Drs. Koos de Jong, Amsterdam.
 
Compare: - R. Schmidt, Chinesische Keramik von der Han-zeit bis zum XIX. Jahrhundert, Frankfurt am Main 1924, p. 41, ill. 48f.
 
Note: The unglazed interior reveals the function of this object: to burn incense.
Art d'Asie comprenant la collection du Drs Koos de Jong - Partie 1 chez AAG (Arts & Antiques Group), Amsterdam, le 05 Novembre 2018 à 14h00.

A Chinese Junyao purple-splashed bowl, Yuan dynasty (1271-1368)

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A Chinese Junyao purple-splashed bowl, Yuan dynasty (1271-1368)

Lot 60. A Chinese Junyao purple-splashed bowl, Yuan dynasty (1271-1368). Diam. 18.4 cm. Estimate: €5,000.00 - €8,000.00. © AAG.

The bowl potted with rounded sides, covered with a milky lavender glaze thinning to mushroom at the rim, one bold purple splash to the interior, the glaze stopping short above the foot, revealing the grey buff

Provenance: - E. Pranger Oriental Arts, Amsterdam (Nederlandse Kunst- en Antiekbeurs 's-Hertogenbosch, 1999)
- Collection Drs. Koos de Jong, Amsterdam.
 
Compare: R. Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, Vol. I, Londen 1994, no. 397, 398, p. 225
- [exhib.cat.] Possessing the Past. Treasures from the National Palace Museum Taipei (by Wen C. Fong and J.C.Y. Watt), The Metropolitan Museum, New York 1996, p. 240, fig. 117.
 
Art d'Asie comprenant la collection du Drs Koos de Jong - Partie 1 chez AAG (Arts & Antiques Group), Amsterdam, le 05 Novembre 2018 à 14h00.

Figure gardienne de reliquaire Kota, Gabon

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Lot 64. Figure gardienne de reliquaire Kota, Gabon. Bois, fer, cuivre et laiton. H. 59,5 cm. Estimation: €150 - €250. © Cornette de Saint-Cyr Paris. 

Belle figure mbulu-ngulu ayant autrefois assuré la protection d'un panier reliquaire, tout en représentant un ancêtre renommé.
L'ensemble est structuré suivant le schéma classique d'une base en losange supportant un cou et un visage plan styliséà la face rehaussée plaques de laiton et de fines lamelles de cuivre.
Le revers de la sculpture arbore un motif losangique en relief.
On notera la très belle concavité de la face, et la belle patine qui recouvre l'ensemble de l'objet.

Provenance- Collection de M. et Mme P. (années 1960-1970)
- Transmis par descendance aux actuels propriétaires

Arts d'Asie - Art Tribal chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 75008 Paris, le 22 Novembre 2018 à 14h30. Expert : Cabinet Daffos-Estournel. Tel. : +33 6 09 22 55 13 – www.aaoarts.com.

Masque Guro, Côte d'Ivoire

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Lot 65. Masque Guro, Côte d'Ivoire. Bois. H. 32 cmEstimation: €15 000 - €25 000. © Cornette de Saint-Cyr Paris. 

Très rare et élégant masque aux traits allongés suivant les fondamentaux classiques de l'esthétique Guro. Au dessus du haut front, la base de la coiffure s'organise à partir d'un motif en «M» surmonté d'une double natte retombant de chaque côté du visage jusqu'au niveau du menton. Le bas du visage est bordé de motifs crantés pouvant évoquer une barbe.
La synthèse des éléments stylistiques structurant cette remarquable sculpture permet de la rapprocher d'un petit groupe de masques aujourd'hui attribués à un maître anonyme aujourd'hui identifié sous le surnom de «Bron Guro Master» et unanimement considéré comme un des deux plus grands artistes Guro avec le fameux «Maître de Bouaflé».
On notera la belle patine, les traces de pigments bleus, et un petit accident à la natte gauche.

Provenance: - Collection de M. et Mme P. (années 1960-1970)
- Transmis par descendance aux actuels propriétaires.

Références bibliographiques- Eberhard Fischer, «Guro: Masks, Performances and Master Carvers in Ivory Coast,» Zurich, 2008 pages 339,340 et 341.

Arts d'Asie - Art Tribal chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 75008 Paris, le 22 Novembre 2018 à 14h30. Expert : Cabinet Daffos-Estournel. Tel. : +33 6 09 22 55 13 – www.aaoarts.com.

A rare and large white jade 'bats' ruyi sceptre, Qing dynasty, 18th-19th century

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Lot 23. A rare and large white jade 'bats'ruyi sceptre, Qing dynasty, 18th-19th century; 49 cm, 19 1/4  in. Estimate £100,000 - £150,000. © Sotheby's.

the large naturalistically carved ruyi-shaped head detailed with a bat perched on top with wings outstretched, the curved and elongated arched shaft intricately carved with three smaller bats near the head, with further stylised ruyi scrolls along the shaft leading to fruiting nandina berries and foliage at the lower end, with a fifth bat at the terminal resting on a pair of peaches above the reticulated lower edge, the smoothly polished stone of an even white tone.

Provenance: Purchased from Stanley Charles Nott, London, between 1947-1948.

Note: This elaborately carved sceptre is impressive and rare for its large size and complex design. Its complex composition of a naturalistically carved lingzhi head, with further lingzhi emerging from the shaft above nandina berries and orchid leaves, exemplifies the craftsman’s high level of artistic and technical skill in harmoniously weaving all the elements together. Such skill is further emphasised in the combination of high relief carving and openwork together with finely carved details, evident in the modelling of the plants where different textures have been captured. Furthermore, the natural inclusions of the boulder have been cleverly incorporated within the decoration to enhance the aesthetic of the piece.

Large jade boulders only became available in increased quantities after the Western campaigns of 1759, when the Manchu court gained control over areas of Khotan and Yarkand, in present day Xinjiang. A steady supply of high-quality jade from this jade-rich region was subsequently presented to the Qing court in spring and autumn of every year. The finest specimens were then transformed to aesthetically pleasing objects by artisans working in the Zaobanchu (Palace Workshops), as well as in the jade workshops in Suzhou and Yangzhou.

It is rare to find sceptres of these proportions; related smaller naturalistically carved examples include two sold in our Hong Kong rooms, the first carved from white jade, decorated with two smaller lingzhi and a bat on the lingzhi-form terminal and additional lingzhi fungus and leaves on the shaft, attributed to the Qianlong period, sold 19th May 1982, lot 388, and the other carved from celadon and russet jade, rendered with a stylised dragon on the head and two chi­-dragons on the elongated handle, 17th May 1977, lot 312; a yellow jade version carved with entwined branches of lingzhi fungus on the curved shaft, sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 2nd October 1991, lot 1459; and a celadon jade example, carved with a cluster of lingzhi fungus on the shaft, attributed to the 19th century, in the Avery Brundage collection and now in the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, San Francisco, illustrated in  René-Yvon Lefebvre d’Argencé, Chinese Jades in the Avery Brundage Collection, Tokyo, 1977, pl. LXXIX.

While the ruyi (meaning ‘as you wish’) sceptre is already a highly auspicious object favoured for its form, the carefully chosen motifs on the present piece further emphasise its propitiousness. The bats, together with peaches and lingzhi fungus collectively form the rebus ‘May your heart be filled with intelligence when blessings arrive’ (fuzhi xinling).

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM

A boxwood ruyi sceptre, Qing dynasty, 18th century

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Lot 135. A boxwood ruyi sceptre, Qing dynasty, 18th century; 43.8 cm, 17 1/4  in. Estimate £100,000 - £150,000. © Sotheby's.

the ruyi-shaped head carved with a shou character below a wan symbol, enclosed by three stylised lotus sprays and foliage scrolls, all below a bat in flight with wings stretched, the long curved elegant stem finely detailed with a pair of cranes below a pine tree and scrolling clouds, with a keyfret border at the handle, the smooth patina of a warm reddish-orange tone.

Provenance: Water, Pine and Stone Retreat collection.
Sotheby's Hong Kong, 8th October 2010, lot 2195.

Note: The present elegantly formed and finely carved sceptre bears all the characteristics associated with 18th century wood carving in China. The design, carefully planned and executed, is full of auspicious symbolism. The crane (he) and the pine (song) together form the rebus 'songhe changchun' meaning 'may you enjoy a life as long as the pine and crane' conveying the wish for longevity. The lingzhi fungus is another symbol for longevity, while the shou and wan characters together form the saying 'wanshou wujiang' meaning 'may one have long life without boundaries'. The bats represent happiness and good fortune.

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM

A calligraphic pottery dish, Samanid, Central Asia, 10th century

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A calligraphic pottery dish, Samanid, Central Asia, 10th century

Lot 44. A calligraphic pottery dish, Samanid, Central Asia, 10th century; 11 ¾in. (29.9cm.) diam. Estimate GBP 15,000 - GBP 25,000Price realised GBP 65,000. © Christie's Images Ltd 2018.

The wide rim with bold kufic calligraphy, the centre with a small roundel.

ExhibitedTreasures of Islam, Geneva, 1985, no. 206

NoteThe two powerful dishes offered here (lot 44 and lot 45), with their elongated kufic inscriptions intensely focused against an immaculate white ground, are typical of what Julian Raby has referred to as amongst ‘the most majestic achievements of the Islamic potter’ (Julian Raby, ‘Looking for Silver in Clay: A New Perspective on Samanid Ceramics’ in Vickers, 1986, p.184). As early as 1944, Lane described the group in these terms: 'Their beauty is of the highest intellectual order; they hold the essence of Islam undiluted' (Lane, 1946, p.18). More recently, Robert Hillenbrand discusses their 'minimalistic aesthetics' and their 'beauty [that] resides in the reduction to the essential' (Robert Hillenbrand, 'Content versus Context in Samanid Epigraphic Pottery' in Peacock and Tor, 2015, p.61). 

Samanid potters can be credited with the invention and perfection of slip-painted pottery – in which clarity of design was achieved by painting brownish pigment mixed with slip on a white engobe which is painted over the red earthenware. These ceramics are amongst the first pieces produced in the Islamic world where epigraphy is the sole ornament. Large numbers of them were excavated at Nishapur and Samarqand (Afrasiyab) and although none is dated, they are roughly datable to the 10th century and a period that corresponds to Samanid rule (874-1005). Hillenbrand raises the question of their patronage and context, as the inscriptions are exclusively in Arabic but they were produced in Persian lands. 

In his discussion of the dishes, Raby convincingly argues that Samanid epigraphic pottery owes its distinctive shapes and decorative repertoire to local silversmithing traditions. He suggests that an increased pottery production may have been a response to a decline in silversmithing, due to a rise in the value of silver. Certainly the distinctive pottery of the Samanid period owes very little to an existing ceramic production. The shape of Samanid pottery, with its sharp angles and thin straight walls is unlike other Islamic pottery of the period but can be found be metal prototypes: see for instance a dish offered at Christie's, London, 23 April 2015, lot 10 and a silver salver, found at Izgirli in Bulgaria but held to be Islamic, probably from 11th century Khorassan (Raby, op.cit., in Vickers,1986, fig.21, p.193). 

The calligraphy of our dishes strongly recalls that found on Qur'ans copied in 'Eastern' Kufic where the playful use of elongations (mashq) contrasts with the elongated curving upstrokes. Raby writes of the aesthetic of dark calligraphy against a stark white ground which is equally reminiscent of niello engraving and characterises much of early Islamic epigraphic silver (Raby, op.cit., pp.186-87). One area in which the inscriptions on pottery differ dramatically from those on metal or paper however is in their content. Whilst inscriptions on metal objects are largely dedicatory or benedictory, the inscriptions on Samanid ceramics usually contain aphorisms. Perhaps because they were less likely to be produced as special commissions, but more for general appeal. Many of the inscriptions allude to faith, generosity and noble qualities, often in a context of food or eating – something Oliver Watson suggests indicates their use as tableware, not just as decorative pieces (Watson, 2004, p.206). 

Christie's. Art of the Islamic and Indian Worlds Including Oriental Rugs and Carpets, London, 25 October 2018

A calligraphic conical pottery bowl, Samanid, Central Asia, 10th century

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A calligraphic conical pottery bowl, Samanid, Central Asia, 10th century

Lot 46. A calligraphic conical pottery bowl, Samanid, Central Asia, 10th century; 10 ½in. (26.8cm.) diam. Estimate GBP 30,000 - GBP 50,000Price realised GBP 68,750© Christie's Images Ltd 2018.

With bold black kufic calligraphy to the rim, a roundel in the centre.

ProvenanceLondon art market, by repute, by the 1980's.

Note: The inscription in elegant kufic also appears in part on two other Samanid dishes sold at Christie's, London, 15 October 2002, lot 15 and 6 October 2011, lot 27. A related dish is in the Louvre Museum, Paris (A.O. no. AA.96).

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Dish adorned with calligraphy, Late 10th century, Eastern Iran or Central Asia© 2010 Musée du Louvre / Hughes Dubois

For a note on Samanid dishes of this type, see lot 44. 

Christie's. Art of the Islamic and Indian Worlds Including Oriental Rugs and Carpets, London, 25 October 2018

Rare 16th century example of a painting authored and commissioned by women revealed

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Plautilla Nelli (1524-1588), ‘The Crucifixon’, the first large scale painting on this subject realised by a female artist in the 16th Century.

FLORENCE.- ‘The Crucifixion’ by Plautilla Nelli restored and brought to light by Advancing Women Artists Foundation and now on display at the Last Supper Museum of Andrea del Sarto in Florence which in recent years has become a collection point for the restored works of Plautilla Nelli. 

Plautilla Nelli born in Florence in 1524, a self-taught artist known as the first recognized female painter in Renaissance Florence. At the age of fourteen Nelli joined the convent Caterina da Siena located in Florence. She spent her life as a nun and an artist and taught art at her all-female workshop. Commissioned by many in Florence at the time to paint religious subjects, Giorgio Vasari would write of Nelli in his book ‘The Lives’ “She made so many paintings for the homes of Florentine gentlemen that it would be tedious to list them all here”. 

Nelli also made paintings for women such as Arcangela Viola, Prioress at Santa Caterina da Siena. Commissioned by the Prioress in the 1570’s Nelli produced three works based on her own religious visions. Two pieces depicting Saint Dominic and Saint Catherine restored by AWA, Rosella Lari conservator completed the latter in 2009. ‘The Crucifixion’ now restored and the central piece completing the lunette trilogy. 

‘The Crucifixon’ the first large scale painting on this subject realised by a female artist in the 16th Century. Nelli was one of the few artists of her time who painted large-scale religious subjects. Forbidden at the time for women to study the male nude, it is believed that Nelli had been given the opportunity to study this subject matter as she inherited the drawings of Fra Bartolomeo, a renaissance painter and who joined the Domincan order in 1500. 

Hidden from public view for nearly 450 years, one now has the opportunity to witness these three lunettes as commissioned originally. They will be permanently on display at the San Salvi Museum in Florence. 

Advancing Women Artists (AWA), an American based non-profit 501(c)(3), organization founded by the late Jane Fortune has spent over a decade researching, restoring and exhibiting works by women in Florence.

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Plautilla Nelli (1524-1588), ‘Lamentation with Saints’. Oil on canvas, 288 x 192 cm. Restored in 2006 by Advancing Women Artists (AWA).

A masterwork at the San Marco Museum, Florence, AWA’s first-ever restoration. The conservation of Nelli’s large-scale fresco-like work on display in San Marco’s large refectory was a monumental job for, as the painting was being examined, live woodworms were found in the wood panel and needed to be eliminated by inserting gas into bubble wrap that sealed the painting, before restoration could begin. It took one month to kill the woodworms. A laboratory analysis of the painting showed various layers, suggesting that Nelli's preparatory drawing might lie beneath the surface. Restorers were able carry out tests using infrared reflectography. Other challenges in the restoration, in addition to the need for careful cleaning, stemmed from the fact that there were several areas where the painting’s pictorial layer had curled.

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Plautilla Nelli (1524-1588), ‘Saint Dominic receives the Rosary’. Oil on wood panel, 147 x 231 cm. Restored in 2008 by Advancing Women Artists (AWA).

An art treasure for Nelli’s order at the Last Super Museum of Andrea del Sarto, Florence. This painting was in a considerable state of despair when it was found in San Salvi’s storehouses. A large amount of repainting has been executed during a past restoration in an attempt to redress extensive loss of color. It has been severely damaged by various causes, including centuries of pigeon droppings, whose acidic composition had corroded the painting’s surface in many places. Saint Dominic, founder of Nelli’s Dominican Order, was known for his visions of the Virgin Mary who inspired him to promote the recitation of the Rosary. Nelli’s lunette is part of a triptych series of panels, commissioned by Sister Arcangela Viola, prioress of Nelli’s convent in the 1570s. The painting’s perspective suggests it was meant to be seen from very high up and her brushstrokes are executed in a way that have made art historians wonder if Nelli intended for this panel to look like a fresco.

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Plautilla Nelli (1524-1588), ‘Saint Catherine in Prayer’. Oil on wood panel, 145 x 235 cm. Restored in 2008 by Advancing Women Artists (AWA).

The titular saint of Nelli’s convent at Last Super Museum of Andrea del Sarto, Florence. Nelli and her school produced several Saint Catherine images, as the learned holy woman was patron of her convent. The San Salvi painting is Florence’s largest work on this subject. The painting was so damaged that the project curator, the Palatine Gallery’s Serena Padovani, initially doubted the potential effectiveness of the restoration. Happily, over the course of two years, Saint Catherine in Prayer was restored to its original dignity. During the restoration process, conservator Rossella Lari noticed that the saint’s gaze was turned upwards, looking intently at the blackened clouds. Surely, there has to be a source of Divine Light hidden somewhere under all the paint and grime? The painting was cleaned for months to remove the dark patent a previous restorer had used to repaint the clouds. Finally, there among the slowly whitening clouds, a tiny strip of yellow light appeared, giving new meaning to the entire image.

A wucai sleeve vase, Shunzhi period (1644-1661)

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A wucai sleeve vase, Shunzhi period

Lot 99. A wucai sleeve vase, Shunzhi period  (1644-1661); 48 cm, 19 in. Estimate £20,000 - £30,000. © Sotheby's.

the slender baluster body rising from a flat base to a broad short waisted neck with rolled rim, brightly painted and enamelled with a group of scholars listening to a seated figure playing a qin, the neck with peonies and chrysanthemum issuing from rockwork.

Provenance: Collection of Hector Beeche (1848-1932).

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM

 

A large famille-rose basin, Qing dynasty, 18th century

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A large famille-rose basin, Qing dynasty, 18th century

Lot 100. A large famille-rose basin, Qing dynasty, 18th century; 41 cm, 16 1/8  in. Estimate £15,000 - £25,000. © Sotheby's.

the deep spreading sides rising from a flat base to a broad everted flaring rim, brightly enamelled to the interior with a medallion enclosing the emperor and his concubine watching young maidens in boats picking lotus flowers from the pond, encircled at the rim by cusped floral panels reserved on a dense leafy lotus ground

ProvenanceS. Marchant and Son, London, 2011.

Collection of Roy Davids.

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM

A rare blue and white 'Lotus bouquet' saucer dish, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795)

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A rare blue and white 'Lotus bouquet' saucer dish, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795)

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Lot 8. A rare blue and white 'Lotus bouquet' saucer dish, Qianlong seal mark and period (1736-1795); 15.2 cm, 6 in. Estimate £15,000 - £25,000. © Sotheby's.

the gently rounded sides rising from a short tapering foot to an everted rim, painted in rich cobalt-blue tones to the interior with a medallion enclosing a leafy lotus bouquet, encircled in the well by classic and lotus scroll bands, the exterior with a lotus scroll band between classic scroll and keyfret bands, the base inscribed with the seal mark in underglaze blue

Provenance: An American private collection.

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM

 

An underglaze blue, copper-red, and celadon-glazed 'landscape' beaker vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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An underglaze blue, copper-red, and celadon-glazed 'landscape' beaker vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 98. An underglaze blue, copper-red, and celadon-glazed 'landscape' beaker vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722);40.2 cm, 15 7/8  in. Estimate £15,000 - £25,000. © Sotheby's.

of archaic  gu shape, the exterior modelled in relief with pavilions within a continuous riverside landscape detailed with tall paulownia and pine trees and craggy rockwork at the foot and neck, the central protruding section decorated with the sanduo on gnarled leafy branches, painted in underglaze blue, copper-red and celadon glaze, the base with an apocryphal six-character Jiajing mark in underglaze blue

Provenance: Sotheby's London, 6th November 1973, lot 34. 
Sotheby's London, 19th June 1984, lot 340. 
Sotheby's Hong Kong, 20th May 1987, lot 477.

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM

A wucai 'prunus' month cup, Kangxi mark and period (1662-1722)

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A wucai 'prunus' month cup, Kangxi mark and period (1662-1722)

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Lot 10. A wucai'prunus' month cup, Kangxi mark and period (1662-1722); 6.5 cm, 2 1/2  in. Estimate £10,000 - £15,000. © Sotheby's.

the delicately potted U-shaped body rising from a short foot to a flared rim, the exterior brightly painted with a white prunus tree growing by craggy rockwork, representing the eleventh month, the reverse with a poetic inscription relating to the depicted flowers, followed by a seal reading Shang (appreciation), the base with a six-character mark in underglaze blue

ProvenanceSotheby's Hong Kong, 30th October 2002, lot 309.

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM


An enamelled 'dragon' meiping, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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An enamelled 'dragon' meiping, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 74. An enamelled 'dragon'meiping, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722); 23.2 cm, 9 1/8  in. Estimate £10,000 - £15,000. © Sotheby's.

the slender baluster body rising from a recessed base to a rounded shoulder and short narrow neck with everted rim, incised and brightly enamelled in blue, green and yellow with a large scaly dragon pursuing a flaming pearl

ProvenanceCollection of Constantin von Hanneken (1854-1925) and thence by descent.

Exhibited: This vase may have been exhibited in the Roemer-Pelizaeus Museum, Hildesheim, in 1930 (possibly no.33. on an unpublished listing).

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM

A green-enamelled 'dragon' meiping, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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A green-enamelled 'dragon' meiping, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 75. A green-enamelled 'dragon'meiping, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722); 23.5 cm, 9 1/4  in. Estimate £10,000 - £15,000. © Sotheby's.

the slender baluster body rising from a recessed base to a rounded shoulder and short narrow neck with everted rim, incised and brightly enamelled in green with a four-clawed dragon pursuing a flaming pearl

Provenance: Collection of Constantin von Hanneken (1854-1925) and thence by descent.

Exhibited: This vase may have been exhibited in the Roemer-Pelizaeus Museum, Hildesheim, in 1930 (possibly no.32. on an unpublished listing).

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM

A famille-rose cup, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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A famille-rose cup, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 12. A famille-rose cup, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722); 10.5 cm, 4 1/4  in. Estimate £8,000 - £12,000. © Sotheby's.

the inverted bell-shaped body rising from a ribbed spreading foot to an everted rim, finely enamelled around the exterior with Shoulao offering a peach to a young boy held aloft by Fu Xing, with Lu Xing looking on, all divided by a two-column poem, all between iron-red bat bands at the rim and foot

Note: The poem may be translated as follows: 

In the heavens, the Three Terraces, On Earth, a first quality vessel.

A similar cup from the Bernat collection, was sold in our Hong Kong rooms, 15th November 1988, lot 37.

It is unusual to find famille-rose wares with these borders of red bats, which are more often found on 'birthday' plates, sometimes with Kangxi reign marks, decorated in white slip or gilding with shou characters or auspicious inscriptions and dragons.

Sotheby's. Important Chinese Art, London, 07 november 2018, 10.30 AM

El Greco and Studio, Saint James the Greater

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Lot 41. Doménikos Theotokópoulos, called El Greco (Crete 1541-1614 Toledo) and Studio, Saint James the Greater,signed[?] in cursive Greek 'doménikos theotokópoulos e'poíei' (lower right),oil on canvas,24 ¼ x 13 ½ in. (61.6 x 34.3 cm.). Estimate USD 500,000 - USD 700,000Price realised USD 1,572,500© Christie's Images Ltd 2018

ProvenancePrivate collection, Spain, until 1946, when acquired by
Private collection, Switzerland.
with Newhouse Galleries, New York, where acquired by
Dr. George Henry Alexander Clowes (1877-1958), Indianapolis, Indiana, from 1956-1958, and by descent to
The Clowes Fund, Indianapolis, Indiana. 
with Rudolf Heinemann, New York, owned jointly
with Knoedler, New York, where acquired by the late owners on 1 July 1960 ($195,000).

LiteratureH.E. Wethey, El Greco and His School, Princeton, 1962, I, fig. 285; II, p. 129, no. 238, as Workshop of El Greco(?).
G. Manzini, L'Opera completa del Greco, Milan, 1969, no. 68 d, pp. 102-103.
D. Rockefeller, et. al.The David and Peggy Rockefeller Collection, I, New York, 1984, pp. 83-4, no. 4, illustrated, as El Greco and Workshop.

ExhibitedAtlanta Art Association Galleries, Collectors' Firsts, 18 February-1 March 1959, no. 3.
Indianapolis, John Herron Art Institute, Paintings from the Collection of George Henry Alexander Clowes, 3 October-1 November 1959, no. 31.

Note: Saint James the Greater was one of the twelve apostles of Jesus, and the first to be martyred. Born in Bathsaida, James was the son of Zebedee and Salome, and brother of the Apostle John. A fisherman on the Sea of Galilee with his father and brother, James was among the earliest disciples to join Jesus, and one of only three selected to bear witness to the Transfiguration. Following Christ’s Ascension, James spread the gospel across Israel and the Roman kingdom, before travelling to Spain and the Iberian Peninsula to continue his mission. James subsequently returned to Jerusalem and was martyred for his faith by King Herod Agrippa. The site of his beheading is believed to be located within the Armenian Apostolic Cathedral of St. James in the Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem. Denied burial in Jerusalem, his body was taken to Compostela, Spain, by his followers and interred. In the 9th century his remains were discovered and moved to a tomb in Santiago de Compostela, where they are venerated to this day. (‘Santiago’ is the Castilian evolution of the Vulgar Latin ‘Sanctu Iacobu’, or Saint James.) His Feast Day is 25 July and the traditional pilgrimage to the grave of the saint has been among the most famous pilgrimage sites in the Christian world from the early Middle Ages onward. 

As the patron saint of Spain, Saint James the Greater was depicted by El Greco on a number of occasions, for various functions, and in several guises. In the famous series of paintings of the ‘Apostolados’ (‘Apostles’) that El Greco and his workshop undertook and popularized in the final decade of his life, the saint is depicted in three-quarter-length or half-length. El Greco also made several small-scale, full-length depictions of Saint James in pilgrim’s garb, holding his staff in one hand, a book in the other, and with a hat adorned with cockleshells – his emblem – slung over his left shoulder, as in the present version. The theme descends from the early Middle Ages, when small figures of Saint James the Pilgrim carved in jet were sold to the devout, who walked or rode on donkeys to visit the shrine of the saint at Santiago de Compostela. James was thus shown in the same guise as that of any humble pilgrim.

 

The Rockefeller Saint James the Greater – with its small-scale, brilliant coloration and dramatic, surreally illuminated landscape – would have been made for private, domestic veneration, and its bold handling suggests that it dates from the final years of El Greco’s life, probably around 1610-1614. Harold Wethey established three types of the standing, full-length Saint James the Greater as Pilgrim that were produced by El Greco and his workshop after 1580/90. The first type, a single figure of James in a frontal, somewhat Byzantine posture, is found in the Museo de Santa Cruz (fig. 1); in it, he is presented standing in a gold-colored architectural niche. The second type, of which the Rockefeller painting is a fine example, portrays the saint in similar fashion, but in a landscape setting rather than a niche. The terrain is dramatically – but only summarily – indicated, but in two later versions produced in El Greco’s workshop after his death, the city of Toledo is clearly depicted, presumably in order to appeal to a local clientele (see Wethey, op. cit., nos. X-364 and X-365). A third type of composition portrays Saint James in three-quarter length with his staff in his left hand, his right hand upon his chest, and against a plain background. The finest version of this type includes subsequent additions by a later hand and is in the Hispanic Society, New York (fig. 2). 

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St.James the Greater by El Greco (1541-1614); oil on canvas; 138x79 cm; Museo de Santa Cruz, Toledo, Spain.

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El Greco, St James as a pilgrim1597, Hispanic Society of America.

The prototype of the second group of paintings and, according to Wethey, the finest among them, is a picture by El Greco and his workshop also in the Hispanic Society, New York, which Wethey dated to circa 1580-1585. He cited two copies of it (ibid., nos. X-364 and X-365), one of which was formerly in the collection of Baron A. Herzog and later in the von Nemes collection, Budapest, and the present painting, which he described as from the ‘workshop of El Greco (?), ca. 1610-1614'. Although he regarded passages of the drawing to be weak – notably in the saint’s right foot – and the landscape 'pleasing, if exaggerated', he believed it most probable that El Greco began the painting himself and sketched it in and that it was finished after the artist’s death by a pupil. Subsequent authorities have largely concurred with this assessment, with both Jonathan Brown (private correspondence, 28 January and 25 February 1977) and William B. Jordan (private correspondence, 3 January 1989) regarding the painting as a work begun by El Greco and finished by an assistant. Jordan noted that it 'is a beautiful painting' and 'while it fails to conform to the highest standards the artist set for himself, it does have a certain brilliance of touch that later copyists invariably lacked.' The signature may be original but significantly strengthened; in any event, it follows the form used by El Greco and his son, Jorge Manuel, and by the workshop after the master’s death. 

El Greco was born around 1641 in Crete, then a Venetian territory. After training there as an icon painter in the Byzantine tradition, he moved to Venice, where he became a disciple of Titian and an avid student of Veronese, Jacopo Bassano and especially the Mannerist art of Tintoretto, whose expressive treatment of subjects was to have a lasting impact. Rejecting the archaic conventions of Byzantine art, El Greco quickly mastered key aspects of Venetian Renaissance painting, including the predilection for glowing color and bravura brushwork. After a sojourn in Rome, El Greco traveled to Spain, settling in Toledo in 1577. There, he created some of his greatest visionary masterpieces, such as the celebrated View of Toledo (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) and the monumental Burial of Count Orgaz, still preserved in the Church of Santo Tomé, Toledo, for which it was originally commissioned. 

Like these paintings, the more modest Saint James the Greater has the arresting power of a hallucinatory vision, in which elements inspired by Italian Mannerist art – elongated figures; irrational space; flashing, supernatural light; and surreal color – powerfully evoke the spiritual realm. Although El Greco died in 1614, after Caravaggio had ushered in the new naturalism of the early Baroque, his art is fundamentally tied to the precepts of Mannerism, with its reliance on the artist's imagination rather than the world of visible reality. It was El Greco’s anti-naturalistic palette and the emotionally resonant distortions of his figures that so profoundly influenced Modernist masters such as Delacroix, Van Gogh, Cezanne and Picasso, all of whom copied or quoted El Greco’s works in an effort to understand his uniquely expressive power. 

This intimate association with early Modernism was a principal attraction of the present painting to David and Peggy Rockefeller, who acquired it in July 1960 from Knoedler & Co. on the recommendation of Theodore Rousseau, the curator of European paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 'We liked it because of our fondness for El Greco and because we felt that, in many respects, El Greco anticipated the Impressionists more than any of the other earlier artists in the freedom of his style and, therefore, that it went with our other paintings much better than many other old master paintings would', David Rockefeller wrote in 1984. It hung in pride of place in the dining room of Hudson Pines, the Rockefeller residence on the family estate in Pocantico Hills, until David Rockefeller’s death in March 2017. 

Christie's. Old Masters, New York, 30 October 2018

Antonio Ponce (Valladolid 1608-after 1662 ?), A basket of apples and quinces and flowers in a glass vase on a stone ledge

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Lot 40. Antonio Ponce (Valladolid 1608-after 1662 ?), A basket of apples and quinces and flowers in a glass vase on a stone ledge, signed 'Anto Ponce / f' (lower right), oil on canvas, 24 x 40 in. (61 x 101.6 cm.). Estimate USD 200,000 - USD 300,000Price realised USD 576,500. © Christie's Images Ltd 2018

Provenance: Julio Dormal (1846-1924), Paris and Buenos Aires, and by descent to his son
Carlos Dormal, Buenos Aires, and by descent to the present owners.

NoteAntonio Ponce was born in Valladolid and raised in Madrid where he began his career as a still life painter. In 1624 he was apprenticed to the great still life painter Juan van der Harmen y León, whose niece he married in 1628. His early style owed much to his uncle by marriage, as he adopted the dark backgrounds and ordered, symmetrical compositions which had been favored by the earlier generation of still life painters in Spain. As his career progressed, however, he began to develop his own distinct artistic identity and style, lightening the backgrounds of his paintings to allow for a more complex and subtle play of light and shade, and arranging his compositions more informally. 

Signed ‘Anto Ponce / f’, this newly discovered work is among the artist’s most beautiful and ambitious, and certainly dates from the 1640s or 1650s, when Ponce’s paintings – often featuring baskets of fruit – were increasingly characterized by lightened backgrounds, less regimented designs, softer lighting and freer brushwork, through which he was able to convey the textures of objects and endow the subject with greater naturalness. The painting depicts a basket of apples and quinces and a glass vase of flowers on a stone ledge. Between the basket and vase, a large quince overhangs the stone ledge, linking the principal motifs and enhancing the sense of space. Characteristically, each element is treated with particular care and a clarity of style which exemplifies the artist’s works of this period. His luminous background is pale, and the leaves, fruit and flowers are sharply silhouetted against it, revealing the influence – however indirect – of Caravaggio’s celebrated Basket of Fruit in the Ambrosiana almost fifty years after it was painted. In format and compositional complexity, the present lot is similar to the artist’s Flowers in a vase and fruit in a bowl on a ledge, recently sold at Christie’s London (7 December 2016, lot 62).

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Antonio Ponce (Valladolid 1608-after 1662 ?), Flowers in a vase and fruit in a bowl on a ledge, signed 'Anto Ponce / fe' (lower left), oil on canvas, 24½ x 39 5/8 in. (62.2 x 100.7 cm.). Sold for 305,000 GBP at Christie’s London, 7 December 2016, lot 62© Christie's Images Ltd 2016.

The fruit basket in our painting has a distinctive weave and plaiting and can be found again in Ponce’s small Basket of fruit in a Spanish private collection (see W. B. Jordan, Spanish Still Life in the Golden Age, 1600-1650, exhibition catalogue, Fort Worth, 1985, p. 175, fig. IX.7). 

Christie's. Old Masters, New York, 30 October 2018

 

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