2008
A VERY RARE LARGE HUANGHUALI FOLDING STOOL, JIAOWU
PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE MIDWESTERN COLLECTION
A VERY RARE LARGE HUANGHUALI FOLDING STOOL, JIAOWU

17TH CENTURY

细节
A VERY RARE LARGE HUANGHUALI FOLDING STOOL, JIAOWU
17TH CENTURY
The upper frame comprised of two elegantly shaped horizontal members carved with leafy tendrils framing the curved, woven seat, supported on two legs of rounded section joined at the centre by pins secured with brass hardware centred by a floret, the legs secured to the horizontal feet with similar hardware and flanking the footrest, set with further ruyi-head corner mounts and a triple-lozenge pattern at the centre, above a shaped, beaded apron and short tab feet
21 5/8 in. (54.9 cm.) high, 24½ in. (62 1 cm.) wide, 26 in. (66 cm.) deep
来源
Nicholas Grindley, 1991.
出版
Sharon Leece and Michael Freeman, China Style, Hong Kong, 2002, p. 56.

荣誉呈献

Christopher Engle
Christopher Engle

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拍品专文

This versatile and elegant form of seating has remained virtually unchanged for thousands of years, and although separately attached footrests became relatively rare on chairs during the Ming dynasty, they were often retained for convenience on stools, which were more frequently moved about.

While quite rare, several similar huanghuali folding stools are known, although all appear to be smaller than the present stool. One example, also with triple-lozenge pattern on the foot rest, is illustrated by Robert H. Ellsworth in Chinese Furniture: One Hundred Examples from the Mimi and Raymond Hung Collection, New York, 1996, pp. 42-3, no. 1, where it is dated to the late Ming dynasty. Another example in huanghuali is illustrated by Grace Wu Bruce in Chan Chair and Qin Bench: The Dr. S.Y. Yip Collection of Classic Chinese Furniture II, Hong Kong, 1998, pp. 76-7, no. 9, which was later sold by Christie's, New York, 20 September 2002, lot 55. A third huanghuali folding stool of this type in the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts is illustrated by Robert D. Jacobsen and Nicholas Grindley in Classical Chinese Furniture, Minneapolis, 1999, pp. 36-7, no. 1. Another closely related example, also in huanghuali, from the Gangolf Geis Collection, was sold by Christie's, New York, 18 September 2003, lot 27, where it was dated to the 17th century.