A QISHA LACQUER INK STONE AND AN INLAID LACQUER BOX AND COVER
A QISHA LACQUER INK STONE AND AN INLAID LACQUER BOX AND COVER
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A QISHA LACQUER INK STONE AND AN INLAID LACQUER BOX AND COVER

QING DYNASTY (1644-1911)

细节
Box and cover: 5 11/16 in. (14.5 cm.) long

拍品专文

Lu Kuisheng (1779 – 1850) was a native of Yangzhou and came from a family known for making lacquer wares. Lu Kuisheng had inherited from his grandfather Lu Yingzhi the skill of making light-bodied lacquered wood inkstones covered with a mixture of qisha, ‘lacquer and sand’, which he further perfected with remarkable lightness and velvety texture. Also known as a talented painter, Lu Kuisheng imbued his lacquer works with keen artistic acumen, as evident from the current box and cover, which has a thoughtfully balanced composition achieved by a careful selection and placement of colourful materials, achieving a visual effect akin to Song-dynasty ‘bird-and-flower’ paintings.

Works by Lu Kuisheng are preserved in various museums, including the Palace Museum, Beijing, which has a similar set of inkstone and box inlaid with a scene of cockerels and flowers, see The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum  Lacquer Wares of the Qing Dynasty, Hong Kong, 2006, pp. 254-255, no. 189. Compare also to another qisha inkstone accompanied by a stand and a similarly embellished cover, see the example sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 30 May 2018, lot 2955; and a square qisha inkstone with an embellished box and cover sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 29 May 2019, lot 2972.

更多来自 摛翰藻 - 文房雅器

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