A fine and rare pair of doucai 'Chicken cups', Marks and period of Yongzheng. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2014
modelled after the Chenghua prototype, each finely potted with gently flared sides, painted around the exterior in bright translucent enamels fluently outlined in clear underglaze blue with a cockerel and an aubergine-coloured hen on one side observing each other, surrounded by their four yellow chicks, the reverse with another cockerel accompanied by a yellow hen with her brood of five chicks, one riding on her back and two struggling over a worm, the cockerel parading with his red crowned head lowered and his black tail feathers displayed, all amongst iron-red roses, yellow lilies and green bamboos growing by pierced craggy rocks in cobalt blue washes, the slightly recessed base inscribed in underglaze blue with a six-character reign mark in regular script arranged in two columns enclosed within double squares; 8 cm., 3 1/8 in. Estimate 12,000,000 — 15,000,000 HKD
Provenance: Sotheby's Hong Kong, 27th April 1993, lot 182.
Exhibited: Selected Treasures of Chinese Art, Min Chiu Society Thirtieth Anniversary Exhibition, Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong, 1990-1, cat. no. 165.
Note: It is rare to find a Yongzheng chicken cup following the shape of the Chenghua original but painted with this free interpretation of the fifteenth century design instead of a precise copy, although one from the Sedgwick Collection, included in the Oriental Ceramic Society exhibition The Arts of the Ch'ing Dynasty, London, 1964, cat. no. 194, was sold in these rooms 14th November 1989, lot 230, and another 15th May 1990, lot 284.
It is interesting to compare this cup with the Chenghua cup from the Edward T. Chow collection sold in these rooms 25th November 1980, lot 31. A second example of a Chenghua 'chicken cup' is being offered this season from the Meiyintang collection, lot 1, formerly in the Mrs. Leopold Dreyfus collection. Although both have a cock, hen and chicks on each side divided by rocks and plants, the Yongzheng cocks are in different positions, with elaborate ruffled tail feathers instead of the three long feathers characteristic of the Chenghua birds, the clump of yellow orchids on one side of the original cup has been changed into bamboo, with a single small lily to one side, and the proportions of the roses and blue rocks on the other side has altered considerably.
The Chenghua cup from the Chow Collection is also illustrated by Cécile et Michel Beurdeley, La céramique chinoise, Fribourg, 1974, col. pls. 71 and 72, together with cups from the same Collection with Kangxi and Yongzheng reign marks, also sold in these rooms, but these Qing cups follow the original very closely in the style of the painting and the position of the birds, with three long tail feathers, as well as in the outline of the cup and the arrangement of the reign marks in a double square.
Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art. Hong Kong | 08 Apr 2014 -www.sothebys.com