Adam's FINE ASIAN ART November 18 2024

383 345 A LARGE HU SHAPED CELADON GLAZED VASE WITH TUBULAR HANDLES China, Yongzheng (1723 - 1735) with broad rounded sides moulded with a single bow- string to the centre, on a short spreading foot and rising to a cylindrical neck encircled by a further bowstring with hol- lowed side handles and lipped rim, the base treated with brown rim and centred with seal reign mark in underglaze blue H. 53cm € 12,000 - 18,000 Seas of Celadon Green Alongside blue and white, which has become a byword today for ceramics originating in China, the colour cela- don, in its many and varied shades and hues, could claiman equal stature; through the ages of Chinese ceramic manufacture, celadon welled continually like a ceramic green tidal wave of multiple complexions. Indeed, unlike blue and white, which had not always been as popular in China as it was to become after its ascendancy during the Yuan (1239-1368), celadon glazes, by contrast, were never out of fashion, and are represented here and in a number of other lots in this auction. During the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) the imperial kilns at Jingdezhen were also chargedwith the production of celadonwares, of which the present lot is an outstanding example. Celadon production had begun modestly at Jingdezhen during the Ming (1368-1644), but it was during the Qing that the taste for celadon became most conspicuous. The Yongzheng Emperor (reigning 1723 to 1735) whose seal mark adorns this vase was a diligent porcelain connoisseur, just as his father the Kangxi Emperor (reigning 1662 to 1722) had been before him, Yongzheng actively legislated for the quality of the porcelain coming out of Jingdezhens official imperial kilns. This was a matter on which he held firm views. Kiln superintendents were appointed to oversee the quality of ceramics produced for use at court, ceramics that during this periodwould achieve newheights of innovation and finesse. Past traditions were respected - in fact, the shape of the present lot ultimately and deferentially echoes archaic precedents - though at the same time, these precedents were never slavishly followed; rather, the old and the new coexisted in a fusion that combined respect for past tradition with a forward-looking spirit of innovation and renewal. Ceramics were created which aspired to embody the best of both worlds, of the world that had been and of the one that currently was. Prof. Alan. J Fletcher, MRIA

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTU2