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Maternité, Culture Colima, Mexique, 100 av. – 250 apr. J.-C.

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Lot 9. Maternité, Culture Colima, Mexique, 100 av. – 250 apr. J.-C. Terre cuite brune massive. H. 16 - l. 9,5 – Ep. 6,5 cm. Estimation: €10 - €200. Courtesy Cornette de Saint Cyr.

Assise, jambes ouvertes, elle tient dans son bras droit un enfant. Son corps est orné de peintures corporelles, d’un pagne, d’un collier et de boucles d’oreilles. Une coiffe faite d’entrelacs maintient ses cheveux. 
Etat : cassé et recollé.  

Provenance: Collection Josette et Théo Schulmann 
- Acquis dans les années 1960-1970.

Collection Josette et Théo Schulmann chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 75008 Paris, le 11 Juin 2019 à 14h30.


Chine, Coupes libatoires en corne de rhinocéros aux ventes pendant le Printemps Asiatique Paris 2019

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Coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros, Chine, XVIIIème siècle

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Lot 18. Coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros, Chine, XVIIIème siècle. Marque Hu Xing Yue Zuo. H : 9.5 cm. Poids : 200,42 g. Estimation: €60 000 - €80 000. Courtesy Piasa.

à décor de neuf chilong grimpant le long de tiges de lotus formant des enroulements, sur fond de fleurs stylisées dans leur feuillage en léger relief, le rebord lobé en forme de pétales et orné d'une frise de grecques. 

Provenance : Collection privée française.

Specimen en corne de rhinocéros blanc du nord ( Ceratotherium simum cottoni) pré-convention, antérieur au 3 mars 1947 et de ce fait conforme au Réglement CE 338/97 du 09/12/1996 art.2-wmc, et antérieur au 1er juillet 1975 et de ce fait conforme aux arrêtés français des 16 août 2016 et 4 mai 2017. 

Arts d'Asie chez Piasa, 75008 Paris, le 06 Juin 2019 à 14h00

Coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros sculptée à décor floral, Chine, XVIIIème siècle

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Lot 284. Coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros sculptée à décor floral, Chine, XVIIIème siècle. Haut. : 7,5 cm ; Diam. : 17 cm ; Poids : 532 g. Estimation: €7 000 - €8 000. Courtesy Mirabaud-Mercier.

(Accidents et manques).

Civilisations : Archéologie, Arts de l'Afrique, Arts de l'Islam, Arts d'Asie chez Mirabaud-Mercier , 75009 Paris le 07 Juin 2019 à 13h30.

Grande coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros sculptée, Chine, dynastie Qing, XVIIe-XVIIIe siècle

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Lot 106. Grande coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros sculptée, Chine, dynastie Qing, XVIIe-XVIIIe siècle. H. : 10,6 cm (4 ¼ in.) L. : 18,2 cm (7 ¼ in.) Poids : 420 gr. Estimation: €40 000 - €60 000. Courtesy Artcurial

L'extérieur décoré de six chevaux jouant au milieu d'arbres plantés le long d'une rivière, un grand pin aux branches noueuses formant l'anse de la coupe, la bordure et la base sculptées de rochers ; petits manques à une branche de pin et à des branches de saule.

A carved rhinoceros horn libation cup, China, Qing dynasty, 17th-18th century  

Les coupes libatoires sculptées de chevaux sont très rares. Un exemple sculpté de huit chevaux et signé Zhenqing faisant partie de la collection Monsieur Thomas Fok est illustré dans Thomas Fok Connoisseurship of Rhinoceros Horn Carving in China, Pl. 168, p. 228 et 229.
Libation cups with horses decoration are very rare. Un example carved with eight horses and landscape, signed Zhenqing, from the collection of Mr. Thomas Fok, is illusted in Thomas Fok Connoisseurship of Rhinoceros Horn Carving in China, Pl. 168, p. 228 and 229.

On y joint une attestation d'expertise par Monsieur Michael Combrexelle, expert auprès de la Cour d'Appel de Paris, qui sera remise à l'acquéreur. 
Cette attestation établit que cet objet d'art travaillé, a été réalisé dans une corne de Rhinocerotidae spp (I/A), spécimen dit pré-convention antérieur à 1947 et au vu de son ancienneté antérieure au 1er juin 1947, son utilisation commerciale dans l'UE est permise ainsi que sur le territoire national français conformément à l'arrêté ministériel du 4 mai 2017, relatif à l'interdiction du commerce de l'ivoire d'éléphants et de la corne de rhinocéros. 

Art d'Asie chez Artcurial, 75008 Paris, le 10 Juin 2019 à 14h00

Coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros, Chine, XVIIIe siècle

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Lot 92. A carved rhinoceros horn libation cup, China, Qing Dynasty, 18th centuryH. 8,6 cm. Poids : Poids : 217,00 grEstimation: €20 000 - €30 000. Courtesy AuctionArt - Rémy Le Fur & Associés

Coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros en forme de fleur de lotus épanouie sortant d'un tourbillon de vase à décor sculpté et ajouré en haut relief de huit chilong s'agrippant à la fleur. (Petit manque à la queue d'un chilong et à une griffe). 

Spécimen en corne de rhinoceros (Rhinocerotidae sp.) pré- Convention, antérieur au 1er juillet 1947 et de ce fait conforme au Règle CE 338/97 du 09/12/1996 art.2- Wmc, et antérieur au 1er juillet 1975 et de ce fait conforme aux arrêtés français des 16 août 2016 et du 4 mai 2017. 

A carved rhinoceros horn libation cup, China, Qing

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Lot 93. A carved rhinoceros horn libation cup, China, Qing Dynasty, 18th century. H. 25,2 cm. Poids : 293,00 gr. Estimation: €50 000 - €80 000. Courtesy AuctionArt - Rémy Le Fur & Associés

Coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros en forme de fleur de lotus à décor sculpté et ajouré de chilong le long des feuillages, l'un formant prise s'agrippant à la fleur. (Manque à la patte d'un qilong, égrenures, restaurations). 

Spécimen en corne de rhinoceros (Rhinocerotidae sp.) pré- Convention, antérieur au 1er juillet 1947 et de ce fait conforme au Règle CE 338/97 du 09/12/1996 art.2- Wmc, et antérieur au 1er juillet 1975 et de ce fait conforme aux arrêtés français des 16 août 2016 et du 4 mai 2017.

A carved rhinoceros horn libation cup, China, Qing Dynasty, 18th century

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Lot 94. A carved rhinoceros horn libation cup, China, Qing Dynasty, 18th century. H.10,5 cm. Poids : 341,50 grEstimation: €40 000 - €50 000. Courtesy AuctionArt - Rémy Le Fur & Associé

Coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros sur piédouche, à décor en léger relief en partie supérieure de frises de grecques et de feuilles de bananiers, la panse ornée de masques de taotie archaïsant et de grecques et de pétales de lotus le long de la partie du pied, deux qilong mouvementés grimpant en guise d’anse. (Petits manques, restauration, égrenures). Socle en bois sculpté et ajouré formant rocher. (Avec manque).

Spécimen en corne de rhinoceros (Rhinocerotidae sp.) pré- Convention, antérieur au 1er juillet 1947 et de ce fait conforme au Règle CE 338/97 du 09/12/1996 art.2- Wmc, et antérieur au 1er juillet 1975 et de ce fait conforme aux arrêtés français des 16 août 2016 et du 4 mai 2017.

A carved rhinoceros horn libation cup, China, Qing dynasty, 18th century

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Lot 95. A carved rhinoceros horn libation cup, China, Qing dynasty, 18th century. H. 11, 8 cm. Poids : 292,00 gr. Estimation: €30 000 - €40 000. Courtesy AuctionArt - Rémy Le Fur & Associé

Coupe libatoire en corne de rhinocéros sur piédouche orné de deux frises de grecques, la panse à décor sculpté de masques de taotie sur fond de petits carrés, deux chilong surmontant l’anse s'agrippant au rebord de la coupe. (Petit manque, égrenure). 

Spécimen en corne de rhinoceros (Rhinocerotidae sp.) pré- Convention, antérieur au 1er juillet 1947 et de ce fait conforme au Règle CE 338/97 du 09/12/1996 art.2- Wmc, et antérieur au 1er juillet 1975 et de ce fait conforme aux arrêtés français des 16 août 2016 et du 4 mai 2017.

Arts d'Asie chez AuctionArt - Rémy Le Fur & Associés,75009 Paris, le 12 Juin 2019 à 14h00

Nine Jian bowls, Song Dynasty (960-1279) sold at Sotheby's HongKong, 30 may 2019-31 may 2019

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A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279)

A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279)

Lot 363. A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279); 13 cm, 5 1/8  in. Estimate 20,000 — 30,000 HKD. Lot sold 12,500 HKD. Courtesy Sotheby's.

the deep conical body rising to a shallow groove at the mouth, applied with a black glaze with cascading 'hare's fur' streaks, the glaze pooling and stopping irregularly above the foot.

Provenance: Bluett, London (label).
Collection of Norman Railing (label).
An old Swedish collection.

A Jian black-glazed bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279)

A Jian black-glazed bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279)

Lot 366. A Jian black-glazed bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279); 11 cm, 4 3/8  in.Estimate 20,000 — 30,000 HKD. Lot sold 137,500 HKD. Courtesy Sotheby's.

with rounded sides rising to a shallow groove below a lipped rim, applied with a black glaze stopping irregularly above the foot.

ProvenanceAn old Swedish collection.

A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279)

A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279)

Lot 377. A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279); 12.4 cm, 4 7/8  in. Estimate 30,000 — 40,000 HKD. Lot sold 162,500 HKD. Courtesy Sotheby's.

the deep conical body rising to a shallow groove at the mouth, applied with a black glaze with drizzling 'hare's fur' streaks, the glaze pooling above the foot.

A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl and a black-glazed 'Oil spot' ewer, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

Lot 379. A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl and a black-glazed 'Oil spot' ewer, Song Dynasty (960-1279); 12.3 and 10 cm, 4 7/8  and 4 inEstimate 20,000 — 30,000 HKD. Lot sold 25,000 HKD. Courtesy Sotheby's.

the bowl with a conical body rising to a shallow groove at the mouth; the ewer with a globular body, applied with a black glaze suffused with 'oil spots'.

A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

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Lot 380. A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279); 12.3 cm, 4 7/8  inEstimate 40,000 — 60,000 HKD. Lot sold 50,000 HKD. Courtesy Sotheby's.

the deep conical body rising to a shallow groove at the mouth, applied with a black glaze with cascading 'hare's fur' streaks, the rim bound with gold metal.

A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

Lot 381. A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279); 12.3 cm, 4 7/8  inEstimate 10,000 — 20,000 HKD. Lot sold 12,500 HKDCourtesy Sotheby's.

of conical form, applied with a black glaze with brown 'hare's fur' streaks stopping short above the foot.

A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279)

A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279)

Lot 382. A Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279); 12.3 cm, 4 7/8  inEstimate 10,000 — 20,000 HKD. Lot sold 27,500 HKDCourtesy Sotheby's.

the deep conical body rising to a shallow groove at the mouth, applied with a black glaze with cascading 'hare's fur' streaks and stopping above the foot.

Property from the Xinyangtang Collection.

Provenance: Tai Sing Fine Antiques Ltd, Hong Kong, 5th June 2001.

An inscribed Jian bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

An inscribed Jian bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

Lot 385. An inscribed Jian bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279)12.4 cm, 4 7/8  inEstimate 20,000 — 30,000 HKD. Lot sold 40,000  HKDCourtesy Sotheby's.

the deep conical body rising to a shallow groove at the mouth, applied with a black glaze with russet streaks around the rim, the interior decorated with four quadrilobed cartouches each enclosing a character reading shou shan fu hai (mountain of longevity and sea of blessings), reserved against a silver 'hare's fur' ground.

A Jizhou 'papercut''prunus' bowl and a Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

Lot 386. A Jizhou 'papercut''prunus' bowl and a Jian 'Hare's fur' bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279); 12 and 12.2 cm, 4 3/4  inEstimate 26,000 — 40,000 HKD. Lot sold 40,000  HKDCourtesy Sotheby's.

the Jizhou bowl resist-decorated with papercut prunus florets reserved against a speckled brown ground; the Jian bowl applied with a black glaze with cascading 'hare's fur' streaks.

Sotheby's. Chinese Art, HongKong, 30 may 2019-31 may 2019.

Two Jizhou 'papercut' bowls, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

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Lot 336. Two Jizhou 'papercut' bowls, Song Dynasty (960-1279); 11.6 and 15.8 cm, 4 5/8  and 6 1/4  in. Estimate 20,000 — 30,000 HKD. Lot sold 81,250 HKDCourtesy Sotheby's.

the smaller bowl resist-decorated with papercut prunus reserved against a speckled caramel-brown ground; the other with three phoenix trailing long tail feathers and a prunus at the centre, the exterior covered with a tortoiseshell glaze.

Property from the Xinyangtang Collection.

ProvenanceTai Sing Fine Antiques Ltd, Hong Kong, 17th July (phoenix) and 11th August 2001 (prunus).

Sotheby's. Chinese Art, HongKong, 30 may 2019-31 may 2019.

 

Two Jizhou 'Tortoiseshell' and 'Partridge feather' glazed bowls, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

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Two Jizhou 'Tortoiseshell' and 'Partridge feather' glazed bowls, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

A Jizhou 'Tortoiseshell' glazed bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

Two Jizhou 'Partridge feather' glazed bowl, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

Two Jizhou 'Tortoiseshell' and 'Partridge feather' glazed bowls, Song Dynasty (960-1279)

Lot 337. Two Jizhou 'Tortoiseshell' and 'Partridge feather' glazed bowls, Song Dynasty (960-1279); 11.6 and 15.8 cm, 4 5/8  and 6 1/4  in. Estimate 30,000 — 40,000 HKD. Lot sold 37,500 HKDCourtesy Sotheby's.

each with an incurved rim, applied overall with a black glaze and liberally splashed with caramel-beige tones simulating tortoiseshell and partridge feathers, the glaze stopping irregularly above the foot.

Property from the Xinyangtang Collection.

Provenance: Tai Sing Fine Antiques Ltd, Hong Kong, 11th August 2001.

Sotheby's. Chinese Art, HongKong, 30 may 2019-31 may 2019.

Historic exhibition of 17 centuries of animals in Japanese art will showcase masterpieces that rarely leave Japan

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Deer Bearing Symbols of the Kasuga Deities, Nanbokucho era, 14th century, bronze, wood with pigments, height 42.5in, Hosomi Museum, Kyoto, Important Cultural Property

 WASHINGTON, DC.- Artworks representing animals—real or imaginary, religious or secular—span the full breadth and splendor of Japanese artistic production. The National Gallery of Art, Washington, presents The Life of Animals in Japanese Art, the first exhibition devoted to the subject, covering 17 centuries (from the fifth century to the present day) and a wide variety of media—sculpture, painting, lacquerwork, ceramics, metalwork, textile, and the woodblock print. On view from June 2 through August 18, 2019, the exhibition features more than 300 works, drawn from 66 Japanese and 30 American public and private collections. The artists represented range from Sesson Shūkei, Itō Jakuchū, Soga Shōhaku, Katsushika Hokusai, Utagawa Kuniyoshi to Okamoto Tarō, Kusama Yayoi, Issey Miyake, Nara Yoshitomo, and Murakami Takashi. 

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Haniwa Waterfowl, Kofun period, c. 5th century, Tokyo National Museum. ©2004-2019 Tokyo National Museum.

Many of the nearly 180 works traveling from Japan are masterpieces that rarely—if ever—leave the country, including seven designated as an Important Cultural Property by the Japanese government. Three of the registered artworks are from the Tokyo National Museum: the six-foot-tall Monju Bosatsu Seated on a Lion, with Standing Attendants (1273) by the Buddhist sculptor Kōen; the intricately carved wood sculpture Aged Monkey (1893) by Takamura Kōun; and the Footed Bowl with Applied Crabs (19th century) by Miyagawa Kōzan I. Two Buddhist hanging scrolls are on loan from the Nara National Museum: Sword with Kurikara Dragon and Two Child Acolytes (13th century) and Fugen Enmei (13th century). Finally, the wood sculpture Fugen's Elephant (13th century) is on loan from a private collection, and a spectacular bronze, Deer Bearing Symbols of the Kasuga Deities (14th century), is on loan from the Hosomi Museum, Kyoto. 

Due to light-sensitivity, some 50 objects will be rotated halfway through the exhibition in early July. After July 13, repeat visitors will have the opportunity to see an additional selection of textiles, paintings, and armor. A robust schedule of programs will support the exhibition, ranging from a family audio tour and community weekend to a public symposium and extensive film series. 

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Unknown Artist, Haniwa Horse, 6th century, earthenware, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Gift of the David Bohnett Foundation, Lynda and Stewart Resnick, Camilla Chandler Frost, Victoria Jackson and William Guthy, and Laurie and Bill Benenson; image courtesy Museum Associates / LACMA.

This historic exhibition is co-organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, the Japan Foundation, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), with special cooperation from the Tokyo National Museum. The exhibition is curated by Robert T. Singer, curator and department head, Japanese art, LACMA, and Masatomo Kawai, director, Chiba City Museum of Art, in consultation with a team of esteemed historians of Japanese art. LACMA is presenting an abbreviated version of the exhibition, titled Every Living Thing: Animals in Japanese Art from September 22 through December 8, 2019. The Gallery's presentation of the exhibition, covering 18,000 square feet in the East Building Concourse, is organized into thematic sections that explore the various roles animals have played in the art of Japan. A fully illustrated catalog has been published in association with Princeton University Press. 

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Pair of Guardian Lions, Heian period, 10th century, Collection of Lynda and Stewart Resnick.

"This summer the Gallery's East Building will transform into an artful zoo, home to a plethora of animals made of wood, ink, or silk rather than fur, feathers, or scales. While zoologists and animal lovers will be particularly delighted by the exhibition, the objects will offer all our visitors a magnificent look at centuries of Japanese art history," said Kaywin Feldman, director, National Gallery of Art. "Bringing these treasures to Washington is the result of a historic partnership between the Gallery, the Japan Foundation, and LACMA. We are deeply honored to work with the Japan Foundation to share these works with American audiences and grateful for their invaluable assistance in organizing and coordinating the many Japanese loans. We are also deeply indebted to the many institutions who have agreed to part temporarily with their treasures, and particularly to the Tokyo National Museum, the largest Japanese lender, which has offered 26 works from its unparalleled collection." 

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Unknown Artist, Seated Horse-Headed Kannon, Heian period, 11th century, wood, height: 103.2 cm (40 5/8 in.); overall: 104 x 93 x 56 cm (40 15/16 x 36 5/8 x 22 1/16 in.), Yamakado Jichikai. © Shiga Prefectural Board of Education.

"The Japan Foundation creates global opportunities to foster friendship, trust, and mutual understanding through culture, language, and dialogue, to cultivate friendship and ties between Japan and the world. We believe this is a basis for building a truly peaceful and rich world," said Hiroyasu Ando, president, the Japan Foundation. "To achieve this mission, the Japan Foundation has organized numerous cultural events around the world and in the U.S. Among them, the upcoming exhibition of The Life of Animals in Japanese Art is one of the most ambitious and creative projects, and will display artworks of high quality for everyone's enjoyment. One may call these works of art—created through long, close interactions between animals and Japanese people over 1,600 years—a gift from humans to animals. I very much look forward to sharing this gift with our American friends." 

The exhibition is part of Japan 2019, an initiative to promote Japanese culture in the United States. 

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Unknown Artist, Pair of Sacred Monkeys, Heian period, 11th century, wood with traces of pigment; a: 41.9 x 22.9 x 24.1 cm (16 1/2 x 9 x 9 1/2 in.); b: 41.9 x 22.9 x 27.9 cm (16 1/2 x 9 x 11 in.), Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Gift of Jo Ann and Julian Ganz, Jr., Margaret and David Barry, the Louis Y. Kado Trust, Mrs. Charlene S. Kornblum and Dr. S. Sanford Kornblum, Murray Smith, and Grace Tsao. photo (C) Museum Associates / LACMA

Exhibition Organization and Curators 
The exhibition is coorganized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, The Japan Foundation, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, with special cooperation from the Tokyo National Museum. 

The exhibition's curators Robert T. Singer, curator and department head, Japanese art, LACMA, and Masatomo Kawai, director, Chiba City Museum of Art, worked in consultation with a team of esteemed historians of Japanese art: Ryusuke Asami, supervisor, curatorial planning department, Tokyo National Museum; Masaaki Arakawa, professor, Gakushuin University; Hiroyuki Kano, former professor, Doshisha University; Mika Kuraya, chief curator, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo; Yasuyuki Sasaki, curator, Suntory Museum of Art; Tomoko Matsuo, senior curator, Chiba City Museum of Art; Nobuhiko Maruyama, professor, Musashi University; and Hiroshi Ikeda, honorary researcher, Tokyo National Museum.

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Kōen, Monju Bosatsu Seated on a Lion, with Standing Attendants, Kamakura period, 1273, Tokyo National Museum©2004-2019 Tokyo National Museum.

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Attributed to Kan Motonobu, Dragon, Muromachi period, late 15th - early 16th century, one of a pair of hanging scrolls; ink and color on paper, image: 84.5 x 43.8 cm (33 1/4 x 17 1/4 in.), mount: 172.7 x 55.2 cm (68 x 21 3/4 in.), Philadelphia Museum of Art: 125th Anniversary Acquisition. Purchased with the Edith H. Bell Fund, the Edward and Althea Budd Fund, the Hollis Family Foundation Fund, the J. Stogdell Stokes Fund, and the East Asian Art Revolving Fund, 2000.

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Attributed to Kan Motonobu, Tiger, Muromachi period, late 15th - early 16th century, one of a pair of hanging scrolls; ink and color on paper, image: 84.5 x 43.8 cm (33 1/4 x 17 1/4 in.), mount: 172.7 x 55.2 cm (68 x 21 3/4 in.), Philadelphia Museum of Art: 125th Anniversary Acquisition. Purchased with the Edith H. Bell Fund, the Edward and Althea Budd Fund, the Hollis Family Foundation Fund, the J. Stogdell Stokes Fund, and the East Asian Art Revolving Fund, 2000. 

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Kano School, Goshawk Mews, Edo period, c.1675, ink and color on paper; mounted as a six-fold screen, Philadelphia Museum of Art: Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Cooper, 1978.

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Helmet Shaped like a Turbo Shell and Half Mask, Edo period, 17th century, Tokyo National Museum©2004-2019 Tokyo National Museum.

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Helmet in the shape of shachihoko, Edo period, 17th-18th century, iron, gold, silver, wood, paper, lacquer, silk, hemp and horse hair, height, helmet bowl 75/8 in, Tokyo National Museum. 

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Suit of Armor with Dark Blue and Red Lacing, Edo period, 18th century, Okazaki City Museum

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Unknown Artist, Shaka Passing into Nirvana, Edo period, 1727. Hanging scroll; ink and color on silk, image: 187.6 x 276.3 cm (73 7/8 x 108 3/4 in.), mount: 276.6 x 308.3 cm (108 7/8 x 121 3/8 in.), Seiraiji Nagoya City Museum

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Dancing Fox, netsuke, Edo period, 18th century, ivory with staining, 27/8 x 17/8 x 1in, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Raymond and Frances Bushell Collection. Photo © Museum Associates/LACMA. 

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Pair of Cranes and Morning Sun by Ito Jakuchu (1716-1800), Edo period, circa 1755-1756, hanging scroll, ink and colour on silk, image 47 ¾ x 157/8 in, Tekisuiken Memorial Foundation of Culture, Chiba Prefecture

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 Maruyama Okyo, Cranes, 1772, An'ei period (1772-1780). Pair of six-panel screens; ink, color and gold leaf on paper. Gift of Camilla Chandler Frost in honour of Robert T. Singerimage courtesy Museum Associates / LACMA.

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Narrative Picture Scroll about Fight between the Twelve Zodiac Animals and Racoons, Edo period, 1840, Tokyo National Museum. ©2004-2019 Tokyo National Museum.

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Unknown Artist, Uchikakewith Phoenix and Birds, Meiji period, 19th century, silk crepe, paste-resist died, 68.5 x 52.75 in, Kyoto National Museum.

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Unknown Artist, Yogi with Crane and Turtle, Edo period, 19th century, silk crepe, paste-resist dyed; overall: 168.5 x 126 cm (66 5/16 x 49 5/8 in.), Matsuzakaya Collection

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Nara Yoshitomo, Harmless Kitty, Heisei period, 1994, National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo

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Yayoi Kusama. Sho-chan, 2013. © Yayoi Kusama, Courtesy of Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo/Shingapore/Shanghai

Getty Museum announces online resource to mark Rembrandt anniversary year

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Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn (Dutch, 1606 - 1669), An Old Man in Military Costume, about 1630–1631, Oil on panel, 78.PB.246, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.

LOS ANGELES, CA.- There are few painters as widely and historically admired as Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn (Dutch, 1606 - 1669). Works by Rembrandt can be found in museums throughout the world, but Southern Californians have the exceptional opportunity to see many important Rembrandts in their own backyard. Re-launched today, Rembrandt in Southern California is an online resource and virtual exhibition that presents all of the Rembrandt paintings in Southern California museum collections and features information about the rich holdings of Rembrandt’s drawings and prints in the region 

“Southern California is home to an exceptional group of paintings by Rembrandt, the third largest in the United States, and the Getty possesses the most significant collection of early works by the artist in the country,” says Timothy Potts, director of the J. Paul Getty Museum. “Rembrandt in Southern California allows anyone anywhere in the world to see and study these paintings together in one place. For museum-goers in and visitors to Southern California, we hope they will use the website as a tool to enhance their visits to see all of these extraordinary paintings in person. Together, these works tell the story of the extraordinary range and unparalleled achievements of one of the world’s most celebrated artists.” 

Rembrandt in Southern California is a project led by the J. Paul Getty Museum and created in collaboration with the Hammer Museum at UCLA, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Norton Simon Museum, and the Timken Museum of Art. 

The remarkable group of Rembrandt paintings in Southern California museums represents nearly every phase of the artist’s long career,” says Anne Woollett, curator of paintings at the Getty Museum. “Together they offer a marvelous opportunity to experience fascinating history scenes, intriguing portraits and the compelling emotional states of heroic figures, as well as Rembrandt’s exhilarating range of painting techniques.” 

The newly released version of Rembrandt in Southern California updates the website launched by the Getty in 2008. This rich virtual resource marks the 350th anniversary of the artist’s death in 1669 and features high quality images and a dynamic design. In the Virtual Exhibition of Paintings, viewers can zoom into high resolution images to explore the paintings in detail, including the newest addition to the regional collection, Rembrandt Laughing, acquired by the Getty in 2013, and read about each work and its relationship to other paintings in the area. 

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Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn (Dutch, 1606–1669)? Rembrandt Laughing, about 1628. Oil on copper. 8 3/4 x 6 5/8 in. J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.

Rembrandt Laughing, about 1628. Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn (Dutch, 1606–1669). Oil on copper. 8 3/4 x 6 5/8 in. J. Paul Getty Museum, Los AngelesIn addition to the 14 paintings in the exhibition, the updated site offers new insight into the substantial holdings of Rembrandt’s drawings and prints in Southern California, including the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens and the USC Fisher Museum of Art. In contrast to paintings, works on paper are not generally on view due to light sensitivity but many or Rembrandt’s works on paper are digitized and available online. For the first time, information about the remarkable array of Rembrandt’s drawings and etchings in the region is available in a single location. 

The 2019 Rembrandt in Southern California also includes links to related videos, podcasts, and other resources focused on Rembrandt and related to the collections of the participating museums. 

While Rembrandt in Southern California serves as a virtual exhibition to be visited online, it also facilitates seeing the Rembrandt paintings of Southern California in person. An interactive map helps museum-goers find participating museums. Each photo of an artwork in the exhibition will include notes on the paintings’ locations that will be updated as works of art travel or go off view for study or conservation. 

Beginning July 16th, Rembrandt’s Portrait of Marten Looten, 1632, once owned by J. Paul Getty and given by him to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1953, will be on display at the J. Paul Getty Museum for the first time, as one of seven masterworks to be displayed with the Getty's permanent collection during the LACMA building project. 

In conjunction with the re-launch of Rembrandt in Southern California, a special program featuring a series of talks exploring Rembrandt’s genius as an etcher, draughtsman and painter will be held at the Getty Center on July 24th.

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Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn, Portrait of Marten Looten, 1632. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Gift of J. Paul Getty, photo © Museum Associates / LACMA.

'Mirror of Paradise'. A diamond ring

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229

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Lot 229. 'Mirror of Paradise'. A rectangular-cut Type IIa diamond ring of 52.58 carats, tapered baguette-cut diamonds, D colour, internally flawless. Estimate USD 7,000,000 - USD 10,000,000© Christie's Image Ltd 2019

Rectangular-cut diamond of 52.58 carats, tapered baguette-cut diamonds, platinum, ring size 7 ¼.

GIA, 2019, report no. 1132889310: 52.58 carats, D color, Internally Flawless clarity, Type IIa
Gübelin, 2013, report no. 13090169: 52.58 carats, D color, Internally Flawless clarity, Type IIa, appendix and 'Golconda' letter.

ProvenanceChristie's, New York, 20 April 1988, lot 308
Christie's, New York, 10 December 2013, lot 496.

LiteratureRome 2002, p. 80, fg. 17
Victoria and Albert Museum, London 2015, p. 49, no. 10
The Miho Museum, Koka 2016, p. 180, no. 142
Grand Palais, Paris 2017, p. 40, no. 12
The Doge’s Palace, Venice 2017, p. 51, no. 5
The Palace Museum, Beijing 2018, p. 60, no. 6
de Young Legion of Honor, San Francisco 2018, p. 171, no. 8.

In the words of Venetian explorer Marco Polo (1254 – 1324) “No country but this (India) produces diamonds. Those which are brought to our part of the world are only the refuse, as it were, of the finer and larger stones. For the flower of the diamonds are all carried to the Great Khan and other kings and princes of the region. In truth they possess all the treasures of the world.” 

Universally esteemed as the world’s finest diamonds, ‘Golconda’ is a name used within the jewelry world to denote diamonds which possess superb luminousness and transparency and an innate purity. Besides indicating a superior quality, the term also signifies that the diamond is a period gem, mined in the ancient diamond fields of Southern India. ‘The Diamonds of Golconda’ were known as India’s most prized possession, and some of the most famous Golconda stones include the Agra Diamond, the Hope Diamond at the Smithsonian, the Koh-i-Noor which forms part of the British Crown Jewels, the Darya-i-Nur in Iran, and The Princie Diamond.

Golconda diamonds have a higher degree of transparency – a quality which is rarely seen in diamonds from other areas, such as South Africa, Russia, Canada or Australia, or even within India. The special whiteness about them is often described as soft, limpid, watery or pure. It is not to be confused with the color grade or clarity – it is rather a quality in which light appears to pass through the stone as if it were totally unimpeded, which gives the stone its soft appearance. In addition, the surface luster appears to have a light softness, more gentle and yet luminous and striking. 

For the connoisseurs, the Golconda diamonds which retain their original cuts are the most appreciated. Since the stones may have been mined hundreds of years ago, many exhibit the slightly less than precise cutting styles common prior to this century. ‘The Evening Star’s old mine pear-shaped cut tends to emphasize the limpid transparency which makes Golconda diamonds so special.  

It is widely accepted that all diamonds which display this special luminousness are of Indian origin. Although little is recorded of the very early days of diamond mining in India, it is believed that it began about 400BC. For about 200 years, with the exception of a small and protected source in Borneo, this was the only source of the precious gems until about 1725 when diamonds were discovered in Brazil, coincidentally at the same time as the majority of diamond mines in India were depleted. 

The Indian diamond fields are found scattered throughout a broad belt of ancient rocks extending nearly one thousand miles in the north-south direction along the eastern half of the country. The vast majority of the diamonds found were from alluvial deposits – a secondary deposit formed by the breakdown of older rocks by the forces of nature and set down in river beds. Within the diamond belt, diamonds were found in five distinct districts, each separated by high terrain. Each district had its own name, the most famous being the Golconda district centered around the area capital, trading center and ancient fort of Golconda.

Christie's. Maharajas & Mughal Magnificence, New York, 19 june 2019


'The Arcot II'

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Lot 98. 'The Arcot II'. A pear brilliant-cut diamond of 17.21 carats, D color, Internally Flawless clarity, Type IIa. Estimate USD 2,000,000 - USD 4,000,000© Christie's Image Ltd 2019

GIA, 2019, report no. 1132471891: 17.21 carats, D color, Internally Flawless clarity, Type IIa
Gübelin, 2012, report no. 12020074: 17.21 carats, D color, Internally Flawless clarity, Type IIa, appendix and 'Golconda' letter.

ProvenanceMuhammad Ali Wallajah, Nawab of Arcot (1717-1795)
Queen Charlotte (1744-1818), consort of George III, King of Great Britain
George, Prince Regent (1762-1830), later George IV, King of Great Britain, by descent 
Rundell & Bridge, London
Auction by Sharp, London, 20 July 1837
Emanuel Brothers, Bevis Mark, London
Robert Grovesnor, 1st Marquess of Westminster (1767-1845)
Hugh Grovesnor, 2nd Duke of Westminster (1879-1953), by descent
Sotheby’s, London, 25 June 1959, lot 20
Harry Winston
Baroness Stefania von Kories zu Goetzen (1939-2013)
Private Collection.

LiteratureKhalidi 1999, p. 67
Balfour 2000, pp. 42-45
Jaffer 2013, pp. 380-81, no. 125.

ExhibitedMetropolitan Museum of Art, New York 2015, pp. 329-30
Victoria and Albert Museum, London 2015, p. 44, no. 6
The Miho Museum, Koka 2016, p. 177, no. 139
Grand Palais, Paris 2017, p. 37, no. 6
The Doge’s Palace, Venice 2017, p. 47, no. 2
The Palace Museum, Beijing 2018, p. 54, no. 3
de Young Legion of Honor, San Francisco 2018, p. 50, no. 2

When Queen Charlotte of Great Britain, wife of King George III, died in 1818, her will was very precise on what should happen of her personal jewels, and especially some of her diamonds:
‘…I give and bequeath the jewels received from the Nawab of Arcot to my four remaining daughters, or to the survivors or survivor in case they or any of them should die before me, and I direct that these jewels should be sold and that the produce… shall be divided among them, my said remaining daughters or their survivors, share and share alike.’ 

Five important diamonds had indeed been gifted to her in 1777 by a loyal British ally in South India, Muhammad Ali Wallajah, Nawab of Arcot. Of incredible beauty, they were some of the favorites of the Queen’s personal jewels. Still, against Queen Charlotte’s will, her son, the future King George IV, appropriated the diamonds for a few years before eventually selling them to Rundell & Bridge, who in 1804 had been appointed jewelry and silversmiths to the Crown by George III.  

In 1837, the ‘Arcot’ diamonds ended up at auction. The historic sale took place in London at Willis’s Rooms in St James’s. The auction catalogue illustrated all of the five diamonds, giving their weights in grains. 'The Times' stated a few days before the auction ‘We have been gratified with a private view of the extraordinary jewels, for some time past in the possession of Messrs. Rundell, Bridge and Co… The celebrated Arcot diamonds are of great brilliancy, and very large: among them are a superb pair of earrings, which, in volume, shape, and purity we should say far surpass anything of the kind.’.  

Arcot I and II, the so-called pair of earrings, were purchased for £11,000 by Emanuel Brothers of Bevis Marks, for their client Robert Grosvenor, First Marquess of Westminster. He was to present them to his wife, Eleanor Egerton, as a present; he had also purchased the Nassak diamond from the same auction.

Almost a century later, in 1930, still in the Grosvenor family, the Arcot diamonds were given to Parisian jeweler Lacloche to be mounted into the ‘Westminster Halo Tiara’ for Loelia, third wife of the 2nd Duke of Westminster. She was famously photographed in 1931 by Cecil Beaton wearing the magnificent tiara. It was then passed on to Anne Grovesnor, fourth wife of the Duke, who wore it at the 1953 coronation of Queen Elizabeth. After the Duke of Westminster died, it was not to be seen until it appeared at auction in 1959 in London, sold by order of the executors of the late Duke.

Harry Winston purchased the tiara for a then record £110,000. He unmounted the two pear-shaped diamonds, which had probably never been touched since they had been in Queen Charlotte’s collection. Their respective weights were 33.70 and 23.65 carats. The discrepancy between these weights and the weights indicated into the 1837 catalogue is understandable. In 1837, the Arcot diamonds’ weights were stated in grains as 131 1/2 and 92 grains. When translated into carats, it resulted in 32.9 and 23 carats. But these are what we call ‘old carats’, when a carat was about 0.2053 grams, before the United Kingdom, and the rest of the world, adopted a universal metric carat at the beginning of the 20th Century. Once converted to metric carat, weights correspond exactly to 33.70 and 23.65 carats. 

Harry Winston had the stones re-cut to improve their symmetry and remove some surface scratches, bringing them to 31.01 carats and 18.85 carats respectively. They were then mounted in separate rings and sold. That is how the famous pair parted for the first time. 

Years later, when leaving the collection of Baroness Stefania von Kories zu Goetzen, the Arcot II was slightly recut to achieve the best color and clarity possible, now weighing 17.21 carats, but still carrying the original magic of its Golconda origin.

Christie's. Maharajas & Mughal Magnificence, New York, 19 june 2019

A Belle Époque diamond jigha

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Lot 149. A Belle Époque diamond jigha, 1907 and remodeled circa 1935. Estimate USD 1,200,000 - USD 2,200,000. © Christie's Image Ltd 2019

The turban ornament set with old, baguette and pear-shaped diamonds, white gold, fitted with plume holder on the reverse, lower portion detachable and may be worn as a brooch, 5 ¾ ins., 1907 and remodeled circa 1935.

ProvenanceProperty of a Royal House
Christie's, Geneva, 17 November 2010, lot 292.

LiteratureJaffer 2013, pp. 258, 260-61, ill. p. 275, no. 103 
Hue-Williams and Sancroft-Baker 2016, p. 36

ExhibitedMetropolitan Museum of Art, New York 2014, pp. 92-93
Victoria and Albert Museum, London 2015, pp. 130-31, no. 76
The Miho Museum, Koka 2016, pp. 36-37, no. 13
Grand Palais, Paris 2017, p. 287, no. 215
The Doge’s Palace, Venice 2017, p. 300, no. 208
The Palace Museum, Beijing 2018, p. 316, no. 212
de Young Legion of Honor, San Francisco 2018, p. 147, no. 77.

Christie's. Maharajas & Mughal Magnificence, New York, 19 june 2019

Très rare vase rouleau en porcelaine laquée noire incrustée de nacre

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Lot 8. Très rare vase rouleau en porcelaine laquée noire incrustée de nacre; 49,3 cm, 19 1/2 in. Estimate: €40,000 - €60,000. Courtesy Sotheby's.

la panse à très fin décor de nacre représentant un extraordinaire paysage dans un jardin animé de lettrés se divertissant tandis que les serviteurs vaquent à leurs occupations, non loin d'une imposante pagode et d'une forêt peuplée de bambous, de pawolonias et de pins sinueux, l'épaulement à décor d'une frise de lotus feuillagée, le col à décor d'une scène de lettrés dans un paysage, le bord supérieur à décor d'une frise de leiwen en incrustations de nacre, le dessous à décor d'un médaillon décoré d'une pivoine en fleur.

Sotheby's. Gentlemen’s Accessories Online, Paris, 4 Jun 2019 - 11 Jun 2019

NDB: A comparer au vase de la collection Eurmophopoulos du musée Benaki à Athènes que j'ai eu l'occasion de tenir en mains.

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Vase. Porcelain with white glaze and dark brown lacquer coating inlaid with incised pieces of mother-of-pearl forming lakes, islands, boat, bamboo, geometric designs, lakeside landscapes, men, attendants and pavillion (laque burgautée technique). China, Jiangxi province, Jingdezhen. Qing dynasty, AD first half of 18th c. Height 35.6 cm. Donated by George Eumorfopoulos (GE 2897). © The Benaki Museum.

Coupelle en grès céladon Longquan, dynastie Ming, XVe siècle

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Coupelle en grès céladon Longquan, dynastie Ming, XVe siècle

Lot 11. Coupelle en grès céladon Longquan, dynastie Ming, XVe siècle. Diam. 17,6 cm, 6 7/8 cm. Estimate: €4,000 - €6,000. Courtesy Sotheby's. 

les côtés évasés et arrondis reposant sur un court pied circulaire, les bords évasés, le médaillon central décoré en relief d’un rameau feuillagé de lotus stylisé, entouré sur les deux faces d'une frise de lotus sur le pourtour, surmontée d’une petite frise de rinceaux stylisés, couvert d’une belle glaçure vert-olive, le pied comportant un anneau non émaillé.

Sotheby's. Gentlemen’s Accessories Online, Paris, 4 Jun 2019 - 11 Jun 2019

 

Vase 'magnolia' en jade céladon pale, fin de la dynastie Ming – début de la dynastie Qing

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Lot 5. Vase 'magnolia' en jade céladon pale, fin de la dynastie Ming – début de la dynastie Qing; 14,5 cm, 5 3/4 in. Estimate: €8,000 - €12,000. Courtesy Sotheby's. 

sculpté en forme de fleur de magnolia aux longs pétales formant les côtés, naissant sur une tige noueuse formant la base ajourée, les parois enveloppées de lotus et fleurettes épanouies et de larges boutons de fleur, la pierre céladon au doux poli, socle en bois (2).

Sotheby's. Gentlemen’s Accessories Online, Paris, 4 Jun 2019 - 11 Jun 2019

 

Vase en jade céladon et rouille, dynastie Qing, XVIIIe siècle

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Lot 6. Vase en jade céladon et rouille, dynastie Qing, XVIIIe siècle; 20,5 cm, 8 in. Estimate: €20,000 - €30,000. Courtesy Sotheby's. 

sculptée au naturel en forme de citron digité accompagné d'un plus petit, creusés en leurs centres et formant réceptacles, les tiges noueuses chargées de feuilles formant la base et remontant le long des côtés, socle en bois (2).

Sotheby's. Gentlemen’s Accessories Online, Paris, 4 Jun 2019 - 11 Jun 2019

Yuan Jiang (1662-1735) attribuéà, Paysage, Chine, daté 1716 par inscription

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Lot 105. Yuan Jiang (1662-1735) attribuéà, Paysage, Chine, daté 1716 par inscription. Encre et pigments sur soie, 66 x 93 cm. Estimation: €2,000 - €3,000. Courtesy Cornette de Saint Cyr.

Beau paysage présentant un personnage dans un pavillon au bord de l'eau au pied d'une montagne.

Une double inscription occupe l'angle supérieur gauche de la composition.

La première est un poème de Zhao Qing-xian (1008-1084), poète de l'époque Song (960-1127) qui peut être globalement traduit de la façon suivante : «des montagnes bordent la longue rivière, la longue rivière coule près de mon pavillon, mon pavillon est entouré d'eau et de nuages, et si vous voulez me demander ce que je fais ici, je dors paisiblement la nuit et vis complètement libre et fort à l'aise durant la journée».

La seconde inscription indique la date, Mars 1716, le fait que l'inspiration soit le poème de Zhao Qing-xian, et le nom de l'artiste, Yuan Jiang colléà celui de sa ville de naissance Hanshang.

Suivent deux cachets, un de l'artiste et un autre mentionnant « Wen Tao ». (Encadré sous verre).

Provenance: Collection Josette et Théo Schulmann 
- Acquis dans les années 1960-1970.

Collection Josette et Théo Schulmann chez Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris, 75008 Paris, le 11 Juin 2019 à 14h30.


Important et rare Bouddha en bronze doré, Chine, dynastie Ming, XV-XVIe siècle

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Lot 233. Important et rare Bouddha en bronze doré, Chine, dynastie Ming, XV-XVIe siècle. Hauteur: 43 cm Largeur: 28 cm Profondeur: 20 cm. Estimate: €100,000 - €150,000. Courtesy Millon - Maison de ventes aux enchères.

Représentant le Bouddha Akshobhya assis en dhyanasana sur un socle a double rangées de pétales de lotus, les mains en bhumisparsha mudra. Il est vêtu d'une robe travaillée en patchwork, chaque carré rehaussé d'une fleur de lotus sculptée. Il est paré de riche joyaux et d'une tiare foliée. Le visage serein, les yeux baissés, les cheveux arrangés par paquets circulaires et surmontés de l'ushnisha. (Ancienne restauration à la couronne).

Provenance: collection privée, Monaco.

Pour une figure de Bouddha similaire reproduite ci-contre mais datée de la période Xuande, voir l'ouvrage: "Classics of the forbidden city, Tibetan buddhist sculptures", The forbidden city publishing house. Ed. 2009. P. 147 Figure numéro 76.  

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Bouddha en bronze doré, Chine, dynastie Ming, période Xuande (1426-1435).

A rare bronze figure of Akshobhya Buddha, Ming dynasty late 15th early 16th century.

A rare bronze figure of Akshobhya Buddha. The Buddha is seated in dhyanasana on a double-lotus base with his hands held in bhumisparshamudra. He is clad in ornate, patchwork robes, each patch decorated with a raised lotus blossom, and adorned with elaborate jewelry and a foliate tiara. The face is serene, with gentle smile and downcast eyes, and the hair is in tight curls over the ushnisha and topped with a knob.

Arts de la Chine - Arts du Japon chez Artprecium, 75009 Paris (France), le 13 Juin 2019 à 10h et 15h

Famille rose Double Ribbon Gourd Vase, Qianlong mark and period (1736-1795)

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Double Ribbon Gourd Vase, China, 18th century, Qianlong mark and period

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Lot 137. Famille rose Double Ribbon Gourd Vase, Qianlong mark and period (1736-1795). H: 18 cm. Estimate 60.000 € - 80.000 €Courtesy Artprecium.

This double ribbon gourd vase (1), decorated with a rococo-inspired floral pattern against a brocade background in apple green glaze and fine landscape painting in a gold bordered cartouche, is an excellent example of the enamel wares produced during the Qianlong reign (1736–1795). 

The shape of the double ribbon gourd vase, often called “hulu shoudai pin” in Chinese, is derived from established forms that had already appeared during the Hongwu reign (1368–1398) and were often used for blue-and-white vessels during the next two reigns of the early Ming dynasty. This form, in turn, was inspired by the shape of portable liquor containers from Central and Western Asia. It is no surprise that the Manchu ruling house of the Qing dynasty was in favor of the Altaic cultural flavor of the shape as this form, though integrated into the inventory of Chinese blue-and-white, still gestures towards the multiethnic aesthetics of the empire. The ribbon was used to facilitate hanging when warrior owners were mounted on horseback. Yet the ribbon fashioned in the auspicious fungus (ruyi) shape on this piece shows the typically playful and flamboyant court style of the Qianlong reign. Refined and delicate as it is, this piece was obviously made for aesthetic appreciation and technical pride rather than utilitarian purposes.
Tied to two large exotic lotuses (Chinese: xifan lian) at the center of the neck and close to the foot, the curly floral patterns executed with a heavy chiaroscuro meander across the surface of the entire vessel. The dramatic shading on the floral scrolls and the calculated white highlights touch on pearls scattered among floral leaves to showcase the well-known European influence on Chinese painting and decorative surfaces during the Qianlong reign. The Imperial Archive and memorial records document how European missionaries and their court disciples were involved in painting porcelain in the court workshops (Chinese: Zaoban chu). Even the coral red applied to the interior of the golden cartouche attempts to enhance the three-dimensionality of the border. 
Another feature of the extravagant color palette deployed in the mid eighteenth century is the refreshing apple green background with a scrolling leaf pattern incised by needles, which is often called flowers over brocade (Chinese: jinshang tianhua). In imitating falang enamel colors imported from the West, the Imperial Workshop successfully experimented with nine indigenous falang pigments, including apple-like bright green in 1728. Porcelain supervisor Tang Ying (1682–1756) introduced these falang colors from the Forbidden City to Jingdezhen, where the Imperial Manufacture of Porcelain was located (2). The design of an incised glaze background was also frequently realized in Jingdezhen under Tang Ying and his successor’s supervision from 1742 on (3). “Foreign enamel (Chinese: yangcai)” would become the term used in archival records to refer to such painted decoration en relief, which resulted from the generous application of costly pigments. The intricate composition and visual impact also resemble decorative patterns on textiles and other media, and such a bold circulation of decorative patterns across media is another trademark of the Qianlong reign.
The two paintings circled within the cartouches on both sides were executed in the typical mid eighteenth century court style, featuring somewhat squarish rocks and a rather detailed depiction of architecture and even furniture inside. The stylized mountains are highly reminiscent of the style of Tang Dai (1673–after 1751) and a few following generations of court painters (4), who had established the pictorial standard for skillful porcelain painters in the Imperial Manufacture in Jingdezhen. The narratives captured on two sides seem to be sequentially connected, telling a story about a friendly gathering in a multi-building estate, possibly a Daoist temple. After a group of gentlemen have entered the estate, which is hidden in an idyllic forest and clouds on one side of the vase, a group of figures including three masters and a servant stand on a balustraded cliff and feed a passing crane tree branches on the other side of the vase. Across the soaring waves, another mansion extends from the hilly shore.
Last but not least, inside the foot with its gilded rim, the reign mark, “Daqing qianlong nian zhi (Made in Qianlong Reign of the Great Qing) again indicates that the piece was made in the mid to late eighteenth century. The iron-red reign mark in seal script, divided into two lines, is inscribed in a white glazed space reserved from the typical lake green glaze otherwise covering the base. Based on the precise structuring of the strokes in the six characters, both Peter Lam and Geng Baochang have dated this character composition to the aforementioned period (5).

(1) Geng Baochang, Mingqing ciqi jianding (Authentication of Ming and Qing Porcelains) (Beijing: Zijincheng chubanshe, 1993), 260.
(2) Liao Baoxiu, Huali caici: Qianlong yangcai (Stunning Decorative Porcelains from the Ch’ien-lung Reign) (Taipei: National Palace Museum, 2011), 246.
(3) Yu Pei-Chin, “The Relationship Between T’ang Ying and Imperial Kilns of the Yung-cheng and Ch’ien-lung Time Period,” The National Palace Museum Research Quarterly 24:1 (2006): 24–27.
(4) John Finlay, “40 Views of the Yuanming yuan: Image and Ideology in a Qianlong Imperial Album of Poetry and Paintings,” PhD Dissertation, Yale University, 2011.
(5) Geng Baochang, 1993, 344; Peter Lam, “Toward A Dating Framework for Qianlong Imperial Porcelain,” Transactions of the Oriental Ceramic Society 2009, 24.

Chine, XVIIIe siècle, Importante gourde en porcelaine à décor de la famille rose d'influence Européenne comprenant des rinceaux d'inspiration de la mouvance Rococco (Caractéristique apparu dans les décors Chinois suite à la présence de missionnaires européens à la cour, le plus connu étant l’italien Giuseppe Castiglione) contenant deux cartouches refermant un décor famille-rose de paysages et de la scène de "Haiwu Tianshou", l'ensemble sur fond vert-pomme rehaussé de scraffiato (de l'italien graffiare : griffer) 
On notera l'ajout de peinture de couleur or au col et sur le talon qui confèrent un aspect noble et impérial à l’objet.
La forme de gourde fut utilisée depuis de 15e siècle et dérive de forme de gourdes de pèlerin portables venant de l’Asie centrale et Asie de l’ouest (favorisée par les mandchoues de la dynastie Qing, originaires de l’ouest et ayant pris le contrôle de la Chine au 17e siècle)
Les anses à forme de ruyi sur le présent objet étaient à l'origine utilisées pour attacher les gourdes à la ceinture des cavaliers durant les voyages
Cet objet fragile était fabriqué dans un but d’appréciation esthétique et de démonstration de prouesse technique plus que pour une utilisation quotidienne.
Finalement notons la présence d'une marque Qianlong à six caractères sous la base : 'Da Qing Qianlong Nian Zhi', ultime signe d'une provenance impériale de l’objet du fait que ces marques furent apposée uniquement sur des pièces destinée au Palais.

Restaurations, sauts d'émail et un choc sur le cou, une anse recollée.

Provenance: Colonel Yves Onno, gouverneur militaire de la base de Tien Tsin dans les années 1930.

Arts de la Chine - Arts du Japon chez Artprecium, 75009 Paris (France), le 13 Juin 2019 à 10h et 15h

Quintessential Le Pho painting tops prices realized at Palm Beach Modern's May 25 auction

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Lê Phổ (Vietnamese/French, 1907-2001), oil-on-canvas painting, 27.25 x 32in (framed). Sold for $52,000. Courtesy Palm Beach Modern Auctions.

 WEST PALM BEACH, FLA.- On May 25, the amiable team at Palm Beach Modern Auctions greeted “regulars” and new bidders alike to a 532-lot sale of high-quality art, designer furniture and outdoor sculptures from fine private collections. For many in attendance, the drawcard was the long list of desirable artists represented in the sale, but others, especially from the South Florida region, came specifically to acquire chic yet functional mid-century furnishings for their oceanfront homes. 

Even if people just came to learn more about what we sell, we were delighted to be their hosts for the day,” said auctioneer and co-owner Rico Baca. “Very often, those who are new to a particular type of art go on to become passionate collectors and valued, long-term customers.” 

Rising to the top of prices realized, an oil-on-canvas painting of a mother and child in a garden setting by Lê Phổ (Vietnamese/French, 1907-2001) sold for $52,000 against an estimate of $20,000-$40,000. The winning bidder was a collector from China. “Lê Phổ is in demand worldwide. Prices for his artworks are going up, and we knew this painting would do well because of all the enquiries we fielded prior to auction day,” Baca said. 

Another work that attracted a flurry of pre-sale interest was David Hockney’s (British, b. 1937-) Pool Made with Paper and Blue Ink. The small 1980 lithograph from the artist’s “Paper Pools” series was signed and numbered 66, from an edition of 1,000. Against an auction estimate of $8,000-$12,000, it made $28,600. 

Frank Stella’s (American, b. 1936-) 1992 lithograph/screenprint/collage titled The Candles (Stapling Down and Cutting Up VII) combined a myriad of colors with fantasy elements. It bore an Irving Galleries, Palm Beach label on verso and was accompanied by its original sales receipt and appraisal document. The artwork swept past its $8,000-$12,000 estimate to settle at $18,200. 

The auction also showcased artworks deaccessioned by the Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens of West Palm Beach, with auction proceeds earmarked for educational programs. The consignment included collections of paintings by two European Impressionists: Dietz Edzard (German, 1893-1963) and Suzanne Eisendieck (Polish, 1908-1998). Although married, the artists built their own successful, independent careers. 

“There was incredible interest in these particular artworks, and all of the lots sold,” said Baca. A circa-1955 Eisendieck painting titled Ballet d’Enfants, accompanied by a COA from the artist’s daughter, Cristine Edzard Goodwin, sold for $5,850 against a $1,500-$2,500 estimate. 

Other noteworthy art results included: a Gabriel Godard (French, b. 1933-) work-on-canvas, $7,800 (est. $500-$800); a Howard Behrens (American, 1933-2014) oil-on-canvas titled First on the Beach, $5,525 (est. $1,500-$3,500); and a cast-paper relief from a 1976 signed edition by Louise Nevelson (Russian/American, 1899-1988), titled Moon Garden, $6,175. 

There was intense competition for designer furniture and accessories like a polyhedral wood and metal rolling bar cart in the manner of Ico and Luisa Parisi, which commanded $9,100 – nearly five times the high estimate. Also, a small Paul Evans Cityscape cabinet estimated at $2,000-$3,000 soared to $7,150, while a pair of Marzio Cecchi chrome and rope lounge chairs more than doubled their high estimate to sell for $8,450. A coffee table by Gio Ponti – always a golden name to collectors of mid-century Italian design – reached the higher end of its estimate range at $14,300. 

Our auction gallery was full for hours during this sale, which was amazing since it’s late in the spring season,” Rico Baca remarked. “In addition, our Internet and phone lines were busy from start to finish, with callers from as far away as Asia. It may sound simplistic, but art by quality artists will always draw a crowd."

Lê Phổ (1907-2001),
Jeune femme assise songeuse appuyée à une table lisant ses lettres, un bouquet dans un vase devant elle

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Lot 295. Lê Phổ (1907-2001),
Jeune femme assise songeuse appuyée à une table lisant ses lettres, un bouquet dans un vase devant elle
. Couleurs sur papier, 78 x 78,8 cm. Estimation : 45 000 € / 50 000 €. Courtesy Leclere.

Provenance : Ancienne collection, Trương Văn Ý, ancien directeur de l’Ecole nationale supérieure des beaux-Arts de Gia Định Acquis directement auprès de ce dernier. Collection du sud de la France
.

Note : Lê Phổ est né le 2 août 1907 au hameau de Cự Lộc, commune de Nhân Chính, district de Từ Liêm/Hoài Đức, province de HàĐông. Son père est le grand mandarin Lê Hoan ayant participéà contrer la rébellion de Đề Thám.
Elève de l’E.S.B.A.I, promotion I (1925-1930), contemporain de Nguyễn Phan Chánh, Lê Văn Đệ, Mai trung Thứ, Georges Khánh, Công Văn Trung, Nguyễn Tường Tam. 

En 1937, il quitte l’Indochine pour venir résider en France et se marie avec Paulette Vaux, journaliste de Life & Time à Paris en 1947. De son mari, Mme Vaux dit : «A ses enfants, il ne parle pas de sa propre enfance, silencieux, il privilégie une vie intérieure. Il se rappelle peu de la vie de son père sauf que celui-ci consomme de l’opium».

 

La postérité lui octroie une place dans la série des quatre pilers de l’art vietnamien « Lê Phổ, Mai Trung thứ, Lê Thị Lựu, Vũ Cao Đàm ».

Il appartient à cette génération d’artistes asiatiques qui, entre 1910 et 1930, ont bouleversé les modes de représentation «classique» en confrontant leur savoir à la modernité européenne. 

 

Ông thi đỗ vào trường Cao đẳng Mỹ thuật Đông Dương khóa I (1925-1930). Những bạn học cùng khóa của ông là Nguyễn Phan Chánh, Lê Văn Đệ, Mai trung Thứ, Georges Khánh, Công Văn Trung, Nguyễn Tường Tam. 

Năm 1937, ông sang Pháp vàđịnh cư tại đó. Họa sĩ Lê Phổ cưới vợ người Pháp là bà Paulette Vaux, phóng viên báo Life & Time ở Paris vào năm 1947. Bà Vaux, vợ họa sĩ cho biết: «Ông không kể với con cái về tuổi thơ của mình, ông trầm lặng và sống nội tâm. Ông không nhớ gì về cha mình ngoại trừ việc biết cha mình hút thuốc phiện».

 


Hậu bối tặng ông hộ chiếu trong bộ tứ trụ của làng hội họa Việt Nam « Lê Phổ, Mai Trung thứ, Lê Thị Lựu, Vũ Cao Đàm ».  

Arts asiatiques chez Leclere - Maison de Ventes, 75009 Paris, le 14 Juin 2019 à 14h30

A gilt-lacquered bronze figure of a seated buddha, China, Ming dynasty, 16th-17th century

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Lot 152. A gilt-lacquered bronze figure of a seated buddha, China, Ming dynasty, 16th-17th century. H.: 67 cm (26 1/2 in.)Estimation : 25 000 € / 35 000 €. Courtesy Artcurial.

Représenté assis en padmasana sur une base lotiforme, la main droite en bhumisparsamudra, la main gauche en dhyanamudra, vêtu d'une robe monastique ceinturée à la taille et laissant le torse découvert, le visage serein, les yeux mi-clos, les cheveux bouclés recouvrant l'ushnisha.

Art d'Asie chez Artcurial, 75008 Paris, le 10 Juin 2019 à 14h00

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