拍品专文
These dishes depict one of the four elegant pastimes for any educated man with scholarly pretensions. Playing music, in this case the pipa (Japanese biwa), was one; the others were writing poetry and calligraphy, painting and playing Chinese chess, weiqi. See the set of three dishes with this decoration from the Peony Pavilion Collection sold at Christie's, London, June 12, 1989, lot 301
Produced in sets for the tea ceremony, roughly made, often crooked tripod dishes were highly praised for their unpretentious simplicity. Compare five tripod dishes from a set of six included in the exhibition, Chinese Ceramics from Japanese Collections, Asia Society, New York, 1977, Catalogue no. 69
Produced in sets for the tea ceremony, roughly made, often crooked tripod dishes were highly praised for their unpretentious simplicity. Compare five tripod dishes from a set of six included in the exhibition, Chinese Ceramics from Japanese Collections, Asia Society, New York, 1977, Catalogue no. 69