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A turquoise-glazed bronze-form vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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A turquoise-glazed bronze-form vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

A turquoise-glazed bronze-form vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 111. A turquoise-glazed bronze-form vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722); height 13 5/8 in., 34.6 cm. Estimate 6,000 — 8,000 USDLot Sold 15,000 USD. photo Sotheby's 2011

of pear shape with long neck and wide flared mouth, the body molded with a narrow band of stylized taotiemasks between keyfret bands, the shoulders set with mock lion-mask handles, covered overall in a bright turquoise glaze.

ProvenanceSotheby & Co., London, 6th July 1971, lot 104.

Sotheby's. Informing the Eye of the Collector: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from J.T. Tai & Co. 22 Mar 11. New York


An unusual 'Guan'-type vase, Yongzheng mark and period (1723-1735)

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An unusual 'Guan'-type vase, Yongzheng mark and period (1723-1735)

Lot 115. An unusual 'Guan'-type vase, Yongzheng mark and period (1723-1735); diameter 5 3/4 in.,14.6 cm. Estimate 3,000 — 4,000 USDLot Sold 194,500 USD. photo Sotheby's 2011

the spherical body with a convex base, the interior fitted with a cylindrical tube, covered inside and out with a thick and finely crackled pale blue glaze, with a six-character Yongzheng mark in underglaze-blue below the mouth.

Sotheby's. Informing the Eye of the Collector: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from J.T. Tai & Co. 22 Mar 11. New York

A 'Guan'-type vase, Qing dynasty, 18th century

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A 'Guan'-type vase, Qing dynasty, 18th century

Lot 118. A 'Guan'-type vase, Qing dynasty, 18th century; length 8 3/4 in., 22.2 cm. Estimate 8,000 — 12,000 USDLot Sold 56,250 USD. photo Sotheby's 2011

of rectangular section, the rounded sides rising to a flattened top pierced with five circular apertures, the sides set with a pair of molded lion masks suspending rings, covered overall with an opaque grayish-blue glaze.

Sotheby's. Informing the Eye of the Collector: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from J.T. Tai & Co. 22 Mar 11. New York

A rare green-glazed bird's head ewer, Liao dynasty (907-1125)

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A rare green-glazed bird's head ewer, Liao dynasty (907-1125)

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Lot 124. A rare green-glazed bird's head ewer, Liao dynasty (907-1125); height 6 3/4 in., 17.1 cm. Estimate 3,500 — 4,500 USDLot Sold 5,313 USD. photo Sotheby's 2011

the lobed globular body set below the shoulders with a short upright spout and vertically ribbed loop handle, the short narrow neck surmounted by a stylized crested bird's head with central aperture, hooked beak and protruding eyes, applied with a finely crackled, slightly degraded green glaze, together with: a green-glazed melon-shaped ewer and cover (3).

Provenance: Collection of W. W. Winkworth Esq.
Sotheby & Co. London, 12th December 1972, lot 12.

ExhibitedMostra d'Arte Cinese, Palazzo Ducale, Venice, 1954, no. 335.

Literature: Jan Wirgin, Sung Ceramic Designs, Stockholm, 1970, fig. 15. 

Sotheby's. Informing the Eye of the Collector: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from J.T. Tai & Co. 22 Mar 11. New York

A 'Yue' chimera water pot, Western Jin dynasty (265-316)

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A 'Yue' chimera water pot, Western Jin dynasty (265-316)

Lot 126. A 'Yue' chimera water pot, Western Jin dynasty (265-316); length 5 in., 12.7 cm. Estimate 1,500 — 2,500 USDLot Sold 28,125 USD. photo Sotheby's 2011

in a recumbent pose with head held high, resting on four squat claw feet, with a finely modeled mane, a cylindrical aperture on the back, applied overall with an olive-green glaze

Sotheby's. Informing the Eye of the Collector: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from J.T. Tai & Co. 22 Mar 11. New York

Two 'Yue' cosmetics boxes and covers, Northern Song dynasty (960-1127)

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Two 'Yue' cosmetics boxes and covers, Northern Song dynasty

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Lot 127. Two 'Yue' cosmetics boxes and covers, Northern Song dynasty (960-1127); diameter of widest 3 5/8 in., 9.2 cm. Estimate 3,500 — 5,500 USDLot Sold 7,500 USD. photo Sotheby's 2011

one box of flat circular form, the cover molded in shallow relief with two flowers, all under an olive-green glaze, the second in the form of three boxes with covers molded as melons, borne on undulating stems in relief  forming a handle, covered in an iridescent pale green glaze (4)

Sotheby's. Informing the Eye of the Collector: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from J.T. Tai & Co. 22 Mar 11. New York

A carved 'Yue' cosmetic box and cover, Song dynasty (960-1279)

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A carved 'Yue' cosmetic box and cover, Song dynasty (960-1279)

Lot 129. A carved  'Yue' cosmetic box and cover, Song dynasty (960-1279); diameter 4 3/4 in., 12.1 cm. Estimate 7,000 — 9,000 USDLot Sold 20,000 USD. photo Sotheby's 2011

of circular shape, resting on a tall splayed foot, the domed cover with a central medallion freely carved with a phoenix in flight, both applied with a translucent olive-green glaze (2)

ProvenanceJ. J. Lally & Co., New York, 1990.

Sotheby's. Informing the Eye of the Collector: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from J.T. Tai & Co. 22 Mar 11. New York

Two 'Yue' cosmetics boxes and covers, Five Dynasties-Northern Song dynasty (907-1127)

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Two 'Yue' cosmetics boxes and covers, Five Dynasties-Northern Song dynasty (907-1127)

Lot 130. Two 'Yue' cosmetics boxes and covers, Five Dynasties-Northern Song dynasty (907-1127); diameter of widest 5 in., 12.7 cm. Estimate 6,000 — 8,000 USDLot Sold 13,750 USD. photo Sotheby's 2011

one with a domed cover decorated with a molded design of a boy holding lotus flowers, under an olive-green glaze, the second with a domed cover with an incised floral design beneath an olive-green glaze, together with: a small bowl in the form of a curled-up lotus leaf, applied with an olive-green glaze (5)

Provenance: J. J. Lally & Co., New York, 1990.

Sotheby's. Informing the Eye of the Collector: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from J.T. Tai & Co. 22 Mar 11. New York


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Lot 131

Lot 131. A carved 'Yue' cosmetic box and cover, Northern Song dynasty (960-1127); diameter 4 5/8 in., 11.7 cm. Estimate 8,000 — 12,000 USDLot Sold 16,250 USD. photo Sotheby's 2011

of shallow circular form, skillfully carved on the top with two peonies in full bloom, the petals lightly incised with combed lines, encircled by short incised sprigs along the edge of the cover, applied overall with a pale olive-green glaze (2)

ProvenanceJ. J. Lally & Co., New York, 1988.
Sotheby's New York, 29th November 1988, lot 166. 

Sotheby's. Informing the Eye of the Collector: Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from J.T. Tai & Co. 22 Mar 11. New York

Le soleil et la lune.

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On aimait bien embarrasser Nasr Eddin avec des questions oiseuses, ou carrément impossibles à trancher. Un jour, on lui demande :

- Nasr Eddin, toi qui est versé dans les sciences et les mystères, dis-nous quel est le plus utile, du soleil ou de la lune.

- La lune, sans aucun doute. Elle éclaire quand il fait nuit alors que ce stupide soleil luit quand il fait jour.

Extrait de "Sublimes paroles et idioties de Nasr Eddin Hodja. Tout Nasr Eddin, ou presque". Paroles recueillies et présentées par Jean-Louis Maunoury. Éditions Phébus, collection "Libretto", 2002. © Editions Phébus

Important Japanese prints from the collection of Henry Steiner on view in New York

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NEW YORK, NY.- Sixty-two Japanese prints and one color woodblock album spanning nearly 150 years—from ca. 1710 to 1857—will go on view this March in an exhibition at Sebastian Izzard Asian Art in New York City. The works range from beauty prints by Kitagawa Utamaro, and actor prints by Tōshūsai Sharaku to Katsushika Hokusai’s iconic Great Wave. They were collected by Henry Steiner, the distinguished Hong Kong-based graphic designer, whose many corporate clients have included HSBC, for which he designed the iconic red and white hexagonal logo in 1983. The exhibition will be on view from March 17 to 29, 2018 during New York City’s Asia Week. 

Henry Steiner (b. 1934, Vienna, Austria), emigrated in 1939 with his family to New York to avoid Nazi persecution. After receiving an MFA from Yale University, he worked for a year in New York City in advertising and design during the Mad Men era. He studied art independently in Paris for two years and, after returning briefly to New York, undertook freelance art design work for a Hong Kong publication. He soon moved to that city and in 1964 established Steiner & Co., a graphic design and brand consulting company. 

Steiner began collecting in 1974, with works from the legendary collection of Henry Vever, and was most active in the 1970s and 1980s. He continued collecting until 2012. In an essay included in the exhibition catalogue, Brief History of an Addiction, Steiner writes that prints of 18th and 19th century Japan had “technical refinement unknown in the West” and that “ukiyo-e have a verve, a raucous humanity, combined with an unparalleled sensitivity of coloring.” 

In the essay, Steiner writes, “I prudently kept my prints in a large box in a cold bank vault. Many friends questioned this strange practice.... I preferred keeping them safely away from fading and the Hong Kong humidity, with the occasional custodial visit.” Describing his visits to the vault as “rituals,” he recalled, “Unlocking the vault door and inhaling the slight, organic scent of the paper, opening the folders and fondly seeing the familiar images – feeling the imaginary equivalent of mild sunlight on my face – was always an example of what, to me, is the sense of cultural nobility such art confers upon their aficionados.” 

Concluding his essay, Steiner writes, “A few months ago, I decided it was time to let my visual darlings travel to new homes and to have this catalogue as a souvenir. I entrust them (in the words of my collector predecessor Edmond de Goncourt) to the inheritors of my taste.” 

Cat_9

Suzuki Harunobu (1724−1770), Woman Admiring Plum Blossom at Night. Color woodblock print: chūban tate-e, 13⅜ x 8⅜ in. (34 x 21.3 cm); 1766. Unsigned© 2018 Sebastian Izzard LLC.

Subjects 
Among Steiner’s interests were prints of “billboard girls” – women who became part of the brand of shops in Japan and were to Edo period Japan what Twiggy was to the 1960s or the Kardashians in our time. Ohisa was the eldest daughter of Takashima Chōbei, an official purveyor of Japanese rice crackers (sembei) to the shogunate. In Ohisa of the Takashimaya, by Utagawa Toyokuni, she is portrayed wearing an elaborately printed cotton sash and holding in one hand a porcelain teacup on a black lacquer saucer. In the other she holds a paper fan decorated with a wave design and the red triple oak-leaf crest of her family’s shop. 

Kitagawa Utamaro’s Sheltering from the Rain, circa 1799, is a triptych that comments on nature and the insignificance of class distinctions: peasants and wealthy merchants alike seek the shelter of trees during a sudden rainstorm. (A print on the same theme, Anthropomorphic Animals Sheltering from the Rain, circa 1844, by Utagawa Kuniyoshi, shows among its colorful menagerie of animal-headed figures a cat hawking rat poison.) 

 

Cat

Kitagawa Utamaro (1754–1806), Sheltering from the Rain. Color woodblock print: ōban tate-e triptych, 15⅛ x 9¾ in. (38.4 x 24.8 cm); 15 x 9⅞ in. (38.1 x 25.1 cm); 15⅛ x 9⅞ in. (38.4 x 25.1 cm); circa 1799. Signed: Utamaro hitsu. Publisher: Tsuruya Kinsuke© 2018 Sebastian Izzard LLC.

Superstition and tradition were and remain important in Japanese culture. Suzuki Harunobu’s 1765 Beauty Leaping Off the Balcony of Kiyomizu Temple, in Kyoto, shows a young woman floating in space, having leapt off the temple’s balcony, a practice that would foretell the prospects of a marriage: if she landed safely, using a paper umbrella as a parachute, the marriage would succeed, and if not, the marriage would fail. 

Cat

Suzuki Harunobu (1724−1770), Beauty Leaping Off the Balcony of Kiyomizu Temple. Color woodblock print: chūban tate-e, 10¼ x 7⅝ in. (26 x 19.4 cm); 1765. Conceiver’s seal: illegible [Kosen no shō]. © 2018 Sebastian Izzard LLC.

Hokusai’s In the Hollow of the Wave off Kanagawa, with nature’s overwhelming power and permanence contrasting with the ephemeral lives of fishermen slim fishing boats, will also be on view. Prices for this print range from the tens of thousands of dollars up to nearly $950,000 at auction for a simple reason: during Hokusai’s lifetime over 8,000 images may have been made from the woodblocks, leading to the deterioration of the plates and, naturally, the prints pulled off them. The impression on view is one of the earliest surviving impressions. 

Cat

Katsushika Hokusai (1760−1849), In the Hollow of the Wave off Kanagawa (Kanagawa oki name-ura). Color woodblock print: ōban yoko-e, 10⅛ x 15 in. (25.7 x 38.1 cm); circa 1830−31. Series: Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku sanjūrokkei). Signed: Hokusai aratame Iitsu hitsu. Publisher: [Eijudō (Nishimuraya Yohachi)]. © 2018 Sebastian Izzard LLC.

Chōkyōsai Eiri (active 1789–1801) is represented by two rare prints, including a triptych, Beautiful Streetwalkers from the Three Capitals, which is known in only one other impression. With no hint of sarcasm or mockery, Eiri magically transformed the streetwalkers into exquisite, elegantly clad, willowy figures.

Cat

Chōkyōsai Eiri (Active 1790s), Okane of Dōtombori in Osaka (Osaka Dōtombori no Okane). Color woodblock print, gray ground: ōban tate-e triptych, 15⅜ x 10⅜ in. (39.1 x 26.4 cm); circa 1794-96. Series: A Collection of Beautiful Streetwalkers from the Three Capitals (Sanka no tsu sōka bijin awase). Signed: Eiri giga Publisher: Yamaguchiya Chūsuke© 2018 Sebastian Izzard LLC.

Cat

Chōkyōsai Eiri (Active 1790s), The Bathhouse Girl Oman of Sanjō-Sunaba in Kyoto (Kyō Sanjō sunaba Oman). Color woodblock print, gray ground: ōban tate-e triptych, 15⅜ x 10¼ in. (39.1 x 26 cm); circa 1794-96. Series: A Collection of Beautiful Streetwalkers from the Three Capitals (Sanka no tsu sōka bijin awase). Signed: Eiri giga Publisher: Yamaguchiya Chūsuke. © 2018 Sebastian Izzard LLC.

Cat

Chōkyōsai Eiri (Active 1790s), Otatsu of Ryōgoku in Edo (Edo Ryōgoku no Otatsu). Color woodblock print, gray ground: ōban tate-e triptych, 15⅛ x 10¼ in. (38.4 x 26 cm); circa 1794-96. Series: A Collection of Beautiful Streetwalkers from the Three Capitals (Sanka no tsu sōka bijin awase). Signed: Eiri giga Publisher: Yamaguchiya Chūsuke. © 2018 Sebastian Izzard LLC.

Sotheby's unveils one of the greatest Rubens portraits to come to market

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Sir Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640), Portrait of a Venetian Nobleman. Estimate: £3 million. Courtesy Sotheby’s.

LONDON.- A rare portrait by Sir Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640), one of the all-time greats of Western Art will spearhead Sotheby’s Old Masters sale in London on 4 July 2018. Unseen on the market for 60 years, this remarkable depiction of a Venetian Nobleman was almost certainly cherished by the artist who kept it until his death in 1640. Acquired by the great Dutch collector Hans Wetzlar in the early 1950s, it has remained in the possession of his descendants ever since. One of only a few portraits by the artist to come on the market in recent years, it is estimated in the region of £3 million. 

George Gordon, Worldwide Co-Chairman of Sotheby’s Old Master Paintings Department, said: “Rubens is known as the“Prince of the painters” and his legacy is far reaching. His timeless modernity and immediacy is evident in this painting which encapsulates several strands of his creative, emotional and intellectual life. With its bravura brushwork which shows no hint of hesitancy, this is a portrait of a man as real to us as he was in the artist’s mind. Almost 400 years after being created, this is a painting that gives the viewer immense pleasure, and one in which we can feel Rubens’ own joy in creating it.” 

The Master behind the Subject 
Painted in the 1620s, at the height of Rubens’ career, the work depicts an imposing and evidently powerful man in the prime of life fixing the viewer in his penetrating gaze. Although Rubens almost certainly based this study on a Venetian prototype, quite probably by Tintoretto, his subject is largely the product of his own immensely creative imagination. 

Far away from Tintoretto’s portrayals of men who almost seem to be wilfully obscure, the work is testament to Rubens’ idea of a forceful Italian nobleman, a Renaissance man who is accustomed to power and leadership. As in his best pictures, the Flemish Master has imbued this portrait with much of his own personality. While not a self-portrait, it is a study of a man in whom Rubens recognises himself – another successful man of his own times, and perhaps too, like Rubens, something of a polymath. 

Rubens’ Fascination for Italy 
Painter, designer, print-maker, sculptor, architect, diplomat, peace-treaty broker, at the helm of the largest studio of his time, Rubens was the first great artist-collector in Northern Europe and the fact that he almost certainly owned the present portrait until his death is testament to its importance. 

This work also reflects Rubens’ love of Italy, which once discovered, remained an essential part of his artistic and cultural influence. During his eight years in Italy, between 1600 and 1608, the artist, then in his twenties, worked for important patrons, including the Duke of Mantua. In Venice he found inspiration in the work of his predecessors Titian, Veronese and Tintoretto. In Rome, the art of classical Antiquity made a great impression on him. He studied it avidly, creating a number of drawings, which he would regularly go back to later in his career. In Rome, he also experienced the direct influence of his contemporary, Caravaggio. However closely he is identified with Flemish art, Rubens never ceased to be in part an Italian artist, as this exceptional portrait shows us.

An iron-red and gilt-decorated vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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An iron-red and gilt-decorated vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 322. An iron-red and gilt-decorated vase, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722). Height 17 1/2  in., 44.3 cm. Estimate 25,000 — 35,000 USDCourtesy Sotheby’s.

the slender baluster body surmounted by a tall waisted neck with a knopped section and widely flaring at the rim, the neck richly ornamented with fine-lined plantain leaves crowning a series gilt-floral registers divided by keyfret bands, the shoulder wrapped in a broad collar of alternating pendent lappets and ruyi heads enclosing stylized flowerhead sprays reserved against a gilt ground, the waisted lower body with four phoenix medallions, the foot bordered with a band of gilt floral scrolls, the interior rim with a band of rosettes with wanzi centers against a spiral diaper ground, coll. no. 1489.

Property of The Jie Rui Tang Collection

Provenance: Christie’s London, 8th June 2004, lot 333.

NoteA related vase of a similarly undulating outline but lacking the bulbed neck and with the addition of pale green enamels from the Qing Court Collection is illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Porcelains in Polychrome and Contrasting Colours, Hong Kong 1999, pl. 82. Other closely related vases of larger size with elongated necks, floral sprigs rather than crane medallions and lacking black enamels are known. One of this type from the collection of Augustus the Strong and listed in a 1721 inventory is illustrated in Walter Bondy, Kang-Hsi, Munich, 1925, p. 209.

Sotheby's. KANGXI: The Jie Rui Tang Collection, New York, 20 March 2018, 11:00 AM

A famille-verte 'Deer' bowl, Qing dynasty, late Kangxi-Yongzheng period

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A famille-verte 'Deer' bowl, Qing dynasty, late Kangxi-Yongzheng period

Lot 325. A famille-verte'Deer' bowl, Qing dynasty, late Kangxi-Yongzheng period. Diameter 7 1/8  in., 18.1 cm. Estimate 20,000 — 30,000 USD. Courtesy Sotheby’s.

the rounded sides rising from a straight foot to an everted rim, the exterior finely enameled with a stag and a doe recumbent alongside one another on a speckled green knoll, their bodies turned towards each other, the opposite side with five iron-red bats swooping through the air, the interior plain, the base with an underglaze blue mark of composite  Buddhist emblems enclosed in a double-square within a double circle, coll. no. 1363.

Property of The Jie Rui Tang Collection

Provenance: D & M Freedman, London, 2003. 

NoteThe restrained composition and depiction of deer of a sweet, docile nature conveys a delicacy and sensitivity in keeping with porcelains produced late in the Kangxi period and into the first years of the Yongzheng period. The subject matter, a pair of spotted deer (lu) and five bats (wufu) is rife with good wishes for scholarly success, wealth, long life and happiness. The auspicious mark on the base reinforces the benevolent themes. Few examples of this type are known. A pair of similarly decorated bowls, attributed to the Yongzheng period, were sold in our London rooms 1st-2nd April 1974, lot 314; and a dish with a six-character Yongzheng mark was offered at Christie's Hong Kong, 31st March 1992, lot 810.

Sotheby's. KANGXI: The Jie Rui Tang Collection, New York, 20 March 2018, 11:00 AM

A doucai 'Dragon' cup, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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A doucai 'Dragon' cup, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 344. A doucai'Dragon' cup, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722). Diameter 3 1/2  in., 3.7 cm. Estimate 15,000 — 25,000 USD. Courtesy Sotheby’s.

the low rounded sides painted to the exterior with two five-clawed dragons striding amidst stylized clouds, each element outlined in soft underglaze-blue and filled in with a combination of pastel and vibrant enamels, all between an underglaze-blue double-line border above and single-line border below, the recessed base with an apocryphal six-character Chenghua mark within a double square, coll. no. 1594.

Property of The Jie Rui Tang Collection

Provenance: Berwald Oriental Art, London, 2000

LiteratureJeffrey P. Stamen and Cynthia Volk with Yibin Ni, A Culture Revealed: Kangxi-era Porcelain from the Jie Rui Tang Collection, Bruges, 2017, pl. 28.

Sotheby's. KANGXI: The Jie Rui Tang Collection, New York, 20 March 2018, 11:00 AM


A large famille-verte 'Empty City Stratageme' dish, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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A large famille-verte 'Empty City Stratageme' dish, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 376. A large famille-verte'Empty City Stratageme' dish, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722). Diameter 14 1/2  in., 36.8 cm. Estimate 15,000 — 25,000 USD. Courtesy Sotheby’s.

with shallow rounded sides and everted wide border, the center painted with a famous episode from Romance of the Three Kingdoms, the brilliant military strategist Zhuge Liang peacefully playing a qinabove the city gate as an attendant sweeps the open entry way in a welcoming gesture, the invading forces galloping away in hasty retreat, the rim finely enameled with stylized crane roundels on an iron-red diaper ground, the reverse with three freely painted floral sprays and an underglaze-blue artemisia leaf mark within a double circle, coll. no. 1631.

Property of The Jie Rui Tang Collection

Provenance: Berwald Oriental Art, London, 2007. 

NoteAmong the many famous recorded military strategems, that of the ‘Empty City’ or ‘Empty Fort’ has long been a favorite. The story as related in Romance of the Three Kingdoms centers around Zhuge Liang, who turned a near certain defeat into victory. As the battle between the states of Wei and Shu raged, Zhuge Liang found himself dangerously outnumbered and unprepared. The ingenious general ordered his troops to throw open the city gates. The general placed himself conspicuously over the city gates where he calmly played a qin. The sight of an unexpected welcome took the  enemy by surprise and fearing a clever trap the Wei army turned face and retreated.  By presenting a bold front, a weak defense may be concealed. 

Sotheby's. KANGXI: The Jie Rui Tang Collection, New York, 20 March 2018, 11:00 AM

A fine famille-verte wine cup, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

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A fine famille-verte wine cup, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722)

Lot 336. A fine famille-verte wine cup, Qing dynasty, Kangxi period (1662-1722). Diameter 3 1/8  in., 8 cm. Estimate 15,000 — 25,000 USD. Courtesy Sotheby’s.

delicately potted, the conical sides rising from a short straight foot, the interior finely painted with cranes diving between clouds toward stylized waves in the well, the exterior with a traveler astride a donkey riding through an early spring landscape, an attendant following on foot, the base with an apocryphal six-character Chenghua mark in underglaze blue within a circle, coll. no. 1220.

Property of The Jie Rui Tang Collection

ProvenanceCollection of Pauline B. (1910-2000) and Myron S. (1906-1992) Falk Jr.,coll. no. 34.
Christie's New York, 20th September 2001, lot 153 (part lot).
 

Sotheby's. KANGXI: The Jie Rui Tang Collection, New York, 20 March 2018, 11:00 AM

Wagner + Partner opens new gallery space with thematic exhibition

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Erwin Olaf, Shanghai: Hangpu - The Journey (2017), archival print, 60,5 x 80,4 cmPhoto: Courtesy Wagner + Partner.

BERLIN.- Wagner + Partner announced the opening of its new premises with the launch of the thematic exhibition, Die Dauer des Moments (The Moment’s Duration). As a crack in time, the “moment”, possesses unique qualities - it is exciting, unbearable, poetic, unpredictable … and? it can also be instantaneously brief. 

Since its inception, photography has harnessed not only light but also the technical skills to capture one moment in time. Consequently, the exhibition looks to the 20th-century photographers André Kertész and Berenice Abbott, who address this fact in an exemplary manner with the bygone scenes they once captured from everyday life. These are complemented by the work of the renowned photographer Erwin Olaf, whose series Waiting addresses the insufferableness of waiting. Olaf also addresses the tremendous upheaval in Chinese society in his current series, Shanghai, which is exhibited for the first time in Germany. 

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Erwin Olaf, Waiting: Shenzhen II (2014), silver gelatine print, 47,5 x 26 cm, Ed. 7 + 2 AP. Photo: Courtesy Wagner + Partner.

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Erwin Olaf, Waiting: Nairobi II (2014), silver gelatine print, 47,5 x 26 cm, Ed. 7 + 2 AP. Photo: Courtesy Wagner + Partner.

 Magic Feelings (1997) is an unusual series of black and white portraits by the German photographic artist Thomas Wrede, which catch the enraptured, almost indefinable facial expressions of people in the breathtaking moment of the steep descent of a rollercoaster ride. 

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Thomas Wrede, Magic Feelings Nr. 21 (1997), silver gelatine print, 11,5 x 8,5 cm (framed: 43 x 35 cm)Photo: Courtesy Wagner + Partner.

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Thomas Wrede, Magic Feelings Nr. 18 (1997), silver gelatine print, 11,5 x 8,5 cm (framed: 43 x 35 cm)Photo: Courtesy Wagner + Partner.

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Thomas Wrede, Magic Feelings Nr. 00 (1997), silver gelatine print, 11,5 x 8,5 cm (framed: 43 x 35 cm). Photo: Courtesy Wagner + Partner.

 The photographs in this exhibition celebrate the instantaneous and are juxtaposed by the quietly poetic works of Bertram Hasenauer and Sophia Pompéry. Hasenauer’s portrait paintings hint at the fleeting nature of an encounter, the maybe of a liaison. Sophia Pompéry’s installation, Der Schnee von gestern (Yesterday’s Snow) explores the impossible act of capturing the moment by exhibiting snow from 2006, and in doing so, the work becomes an imaginative play on this parable. Pompéry has a humorous knack of presenting unusual and banal connections in perceptible ways and these surprises are a common element of her practice. 

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Bertram Hasenauer, Untitled (2018), oil on canvas, 40 x 30 cmPhoto: Courtesy Wagner + Partner.

These works can be read as social commentary on our exceedingly digitised and efficient times, which leave less room for the useless, boring or unpredictable. The exhibition marks the beginning of a series of thematic group exhibitions, which will become a focus for Wagner + Partner in the new Mitte location.

An exceptional pair of massive sancai-glazed pottery guardian figures, Tang dynasty (AD 618-907)

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Lot 705

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Lot 705. An exceptional pair of massive sancai-glazed pottery guardian figures, Tang dynasty (AD 618-907); 40 ½ and 38 in. (103 and 96.5 cm.) high. Estimate USD 150,000 - USD 250,000© Christie's Images Ltd 2018

Each guardian figure is modeled standing on a recumbent ox, with the right arm raised as if to hold a spear and the left hand resting on the hip. His face is modeled with a fierce expression, and each is dressed in full armor, finely detailed with stamped decoration including florets on the breast plate, and with horned mask epaulettes at each shoulder, and is attractively glazed in tones of amber, green and cream.  

Provenance: Acquired in Hong Kong, 1999.

Property from the Hall in Memory of Cypress (Jibo Tang)

NoteThese imposing figures are remarkable for their fine modeling, detailing and masterful application of the glazes. As with other figures of this type, they are modeled with fierce scowling expressions and a threatening stance meant to deter those who might disturb the deceased, and they carry on the tradition of the massive stone guardian figures (lishi) that were positioned at the entrances to cave-shrines during the Tang dynasty. The glazed pottery figures of the mid-8th century had now evolved into military guardians and were dressed in elaborate armor. Also typical of some of these large guardian figures that have survived in pairs, one of the present figures has his hair dressed in a topknot while the other wears a leather helmet. For another imposing figure of this type, also shown standing on a recumbent bull, see the example illustrated in The Tsui Museum of Art - Chinese Ceramics I: Neolithic to Liao, Hong Kong, 1993, pl. 119.

The result of Oxford thermoluminescence test no. PH 993/404 is consistent with the dating of this lot.  

Christie's. Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art, 22 - 23 March 2018, New York 

A rare Longquan celadon jar and cover, Northern Song dynasty (AD 960-1127)

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Lot 706

Lot 706. A rare Longquan celadon jar and cover, Northern Song dynasty (AD 960-1127); 9 ¼ in. (23.5 cm.) high. Estimate USD 10,000 - USD 15,000© Christie's Images Ltd 2018

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The jar has an ovoid body with canted shoulder, and is carved and combed with a band of overlapping petals beneath a wide band of lotus scroll. The cover is decorated with an animal-form finial. The jar and cover are covered with an unctuous glaze of soft sea-green color that thins on the raised areas, and also covers the inside of the foot, silk cloth, Japanese wood box.

Christie's. Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art, 22 - 23 March 2018, New York 

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