详情
13 9/16 in. (34.5 cm.) high, Japanese wood box
来源
A Japanese private collection, acquired in the 1930s
Sold at Sotheby's Paris, 12 December 2013, lot 144
Sold at Sotheby's Hong Kong, 3 October 2017, lot 3688
出版
Chinese Ceramics From the Dawentang Collection, vol. 2, Hong Kong, 2019, pp. 478-481, no. 88
展览
Hong Kong Museum of Art, Honouring Tradition and Heritage: Min Chiu Society at Sixty, Hong Kong, 18 December 2020 – 28 April 2021, p. 280, cat. no. 132
荣誉呈献

拍品专文

This blue and white moon flask is of ovoid form with a cylindrical neck flanked by a pair of ruyi-form handles where the neck meets the shoulder. The body is decorated overall in underglaze blue, with a central vajra (thunderbolt) motif encircled by eight lotus panels, each enclosing one of the Eight Buddhist Emblems. Beginning at the six o’clock position and proceeding clockwise, they comprise the wheel, conch, umbrella, canopy, flower, vase, fish, and endless knot. The underglaze blue has been skilfully applied to emulate the characteristic ‘heaped and piled’ effect seen on early 15th-century blue and white wares. The form ultimately derives from metalwork examples introduced to China from Central Asia.

This classic moonflask form is known as baoyue ping in Chinese, so named because the large neck and foot appear to support the central body like a full moon. Blue and white moonflasks of early Qianlong date are known in two principal sizes: a larger type, typically around 50 cm. in height, which is more common, and a smaller, rarer type exemplified by the present piece at approximately 35 cm. high. A closely related example, formerly in the Manno Art Museum collection, was sold at Christie’s London, 21 June 2001, lot 106.

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