拍品专文
This richly decorated vessel is a rare example of a ewer covered with lacquer inlaid with mother-of-pearl. Although the inlay of fairly large pieces of shell and bone has been found on remains of items dating to the Shang dynasty, and mother-of-pearl was inlaid into Tang dynasty lacquered wares to great effect, the use of tiny multi-colored pieces of mother-of-pearl to create complex designs does not appear to have become a prominent feature of Chinese lacquer until the Yuan dynasty. Most of the items decorated in this technique are boxes, trays or furniture, and vertical forms decorated using this technique are rare.
A mother-of-pearl inlaid lacquer ewer of square section with C-shaped handle is in the collection of the Chinese History Museum, Beijing. See Zhongguo wenwu jinghua daquan; Jin yin yu shi juan, Hong Kong, 1994, p. 195, no. 113. A red lacquer ewer of very similar form to the current example, but of hexagonal section and decorated with carved scrolling designs, in the collection of the Lee Family was included in the exhibition, Drache und Phoenix: Lackarbeiten aus China; Sammlung der Familie Lee, Köln, 1990, Tokyo, pp. 54-5, no. 13. The Lee ewer bears a Jiajing mark and has been catalogued as of the period.
The variegated floral scroll in the ogival panels on the body of the current ewer are similar in style to those on a 16th century octagonal mother-of-pearl inlaid lacquer tray in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, formerly in the collection of Sir John Figgess and then in the collection of Sir Harry Garner, illustrated in Chinese and Associated Lacquer from the Garner Collection, British Museum, 1973, pl. 52b, no. 126. This tray also has the same precisely executed cash pattern providing a background for the cartouches on its rim, as that seen on the current ewer. This version of the cash pattern also appears on a round mother-of-pearl inlaid box in the Victoria and Albert Museum dated by inscription to AD 1537, illustrated by Sir Harry Garner, Chinese Lacquer, London/Boston, 1979, pls. 167 and 168.
A mother-of-pearl inlaid lacquer ewer of square section with C-shaped handle is in the collection of the Chinese History Museum, Beijing. See Zhongguo wenwu jinghua daquan; Jin yin yu shi juan, Hong Kong, 1994, p. 195, no. 113. A red lacquer ewer of very similar form to the current example, but of hexagonal section and decorated with carved scrolling designs, in the collection of the Lee Family was included in the exhibition, Drache und Phoenix: Lackarbeiten aus China; Sammlung der Familie Lee, Köln, 1990, Tokyo, pp. 54-5, no. 13. The Lee ewer bears a Jiajing mark and has been catalogued as of the period.
The variegated floral scroll in the ogival panels on the body of the current ewer are similar in style to those on a 16th century octagonal mother-of-pearl inlaid lacquer tray in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, formerly in the collection of Sir John Figgess and then in the collection of Sir Harry Garner, illustrated in Chinese and Associated Lacquer from the Garner Collection, British Museum, 1973, pl. 52b, no. 126. This tray also has the same precisely executed cash pattern providing a background for the cartouches on its rim, as that seen on the current ewer. This version of the cash pattern also appears on a round mother-of-pearl inlaid box in the Victoria and Albert Museum dated by inscription to AD 1537, illustrated by Sir Harry Garner, Chinese Lacquer, London/Boston, 1979, pls. 167 and 168.
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