A HUANGHUALI WAISTLESS FOOTREST, JIAOTA
A HUANGHUALI WAISTLESS FOOTREST, JIAOTA

QING DYNASTY, 18TH CENTURY

细节
A HUANGHUALI WAISTLESS FOOTREST, JIAOTA
QING DYNASTY, 18TH CENTURY
Of rectangular form, the top comprised of two sections, each with two cylindrical rollers, all above plain aprons. The whole footrest is raised on short legs of square section terminating in hoof feet.
6 1/4 in. (16 cm.) high, 25 5/8 in. (65 cm.) wide, 11 3/8 in. (29 cm.) deep
来源
Acquired in Hong Kong in the early 1990s

荣誉呈献

Ruben Lien
Ruben Lien

查阅状况报告或联络我们查询更多拍品资料

登入
浏览状况报告

拍品专文

Although Chinese chairs were traditionally fitted with a footrest stretcher, a separate footstool was more comfortable, and in furniture arrangements, the placement of a single footstool often distinguished the highest ranked person. The beneficial use of the foot stool was described by Wen Zhenheng during the late Ming period, 'Moving the feet back and forth over the rollers excites the vital energies (jingqi) to bubble upward like a fountain'.
A similar waisted example also with two sets of three rollers of zitan wood is illustrated in Chinese Furniture, One Hundred and Three Examples from the Mimi and Raymond Hung Collection, Hong Kong, 2005, p. 119, no. 59. A related example of zhazhenmu, a wood associated with the mulberry species, formerly from the M.D. Flacks Collection, was sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 28 November 2012, lot 2032.

更多来自 奉文堂藏竹雕及家具

查看全部
查看全部