Quantcast
Channel: Alain.R.Truong
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 36084

A very rare huanghuali waistless demi-lune table, yueyazhuo, 16th-17th century

$
0
0

A very rare huanghuali waistless demi-lune table, yueyazhuo, 16th-17th century

2

A very rare huanghuali waistless demi-lune table, yueyazhuo, 16th-17th centuryEstimate $150,000 – $200,000. Photo Christie's Image Lt 2015

The single-panel top is set within a D-form frame with beaded edge above shaped aprons. The whole is raised on four tapering legs of square section terminating in flared hoof feet. 33 ¾ in. (85.7 cm.) high, 43 in. (109.2 cm.) wide, 21 in. (53.3 cm.) deep

Provenance: Property from the Lai Family Collection.

Notes:  Half-round tables are recorded in the Ming carpenter's manuals, Lu Ban Jing, suggesting they were once more common than the few surviving examples would seem to indicate. A demi-lune table and two outline drawings are illustated by Wang Shixiang, Connoisseurship of Chinese Furniture, vol. II, p. 118, B125-B127. 

Thought to be made in pairs, demi-lune tables were designed to be pushed together to form a single round table. The half-width of the rear legs of the present table suggests this table would have been made as one of a pair. When matched with its mate, the table's half legs would appear to be a single leg. There are no known extant pairs of demi-lune tables, dating to the 16th-17th century, and even single tables such as the present example are quite rare. 

The use of supporting cross stretchers appears to be quite rare and only one other published example, illustrated by M. Flacks, Classical Chinese Furniture: a very personal point of view, London, 2011, pp. 248-51, also has this very unusual construction. Most published examples, such as a demi-lune table in the collection of Messrs. Robert and William Drummond, illustrated by G. Ecke, Domestic Chinese Furniture, Rutland and Tokyo, 1962, p. 72, fig. 55, are shown with shaped aprons. See, also, another huanghuali demi-lune example illustrated by Grace Wu Bruce, Living With Ming – The Lu Ming Shi Collection, Phillipe de Backer, 2000, p. 112, pl. 22, and one sold at Christie's New York, 18 September 1997, lot 33, from the Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Piccus Collection.

Christie's. THE LAI FAMILY COLLECTION OF FINE CHINESE FURNITURE AND WORKS OF ART17 September 2015, New York, Rockefeller Plaza


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 36084

Trending Articles