A SUPERB UNDERGLAZE-BLUE AND COPPER-RED-DECORATED 'DRAGON' MOON FLASK
A SUPERB UNDERGLAZE-BLUE AND COPPER-RED-DECORATED 'DRAGON' MOON FLASK
A SUPERB UNDERGLAZE-BLUE AND COPPER-RED-DECORATED 'DRAGON' MOON FLASK
1 更多
A SUPERB UNDERGLAZE-BLUE AND COPPER-RED-DECORATED 'DRAGON' MOON FLASK
4 更多
Property from an Important North American Private Collection
A SUPERB UNDERGLAZE-BLUE AND COPPER-RED-DECORATED 'DRAGON' MOON FLASK

QIANLONG SEAL MARK IN UNDERGLAZE BLUE AND OF THE PERIOD (1736-1795)

细节
12 1⁄8 in. (30.8 cm.) high, cloth box
来源
Sotheby's Hong Kong, 30 April-1 May 1996, lot 460.

荣誉呈献

Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安) Head of Sale, AVP, Specialist

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拍品专文

This superb moon flask is a rare example of a large imperial Qianlong vessel decorated with underglaze copper-red dragons amid richly painted underglaze‑blue waves and clouds, demonstrating the superb technical control achieved at the imperial kilns at this time.

A closely related moon flask of comparable design and size (31 cm.) is in the Qing court collection, and illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum—36--Blue and White Porcelain with Underglazed Red (III), Hong Kong, 2000, p. 233, no. 213. Further examples include one illustrated in Soame Jenyns, Later Chinese Porcelain: The Ch’ing Dynasty, 1971, pl. XCIV, fig. 1, and another from the Walters Collection illustrated in Bushell, Oriental Ceramic Art, New York, 1981, fig. 17.

The decoration ultimately derives from early Ming porcelains combining iron‑red dragons with underglaze blue decoration. As early as the Yongle reign (1402–24), a small number of imperial wares were decorated with red dragons against blue grounds, including a Yongle stem bowl excavated at the imperial kilns in 1999 and published in The Porcelain of Imperial Kiln in Ming and Qing Dynasties, Beijing, 2016, pp. 178–9, no. 75. Although iron‑red was also used on Hongwu and Yongle porcelains, its combination with cobalt blue became more widespread during the Xuande reign.

A small group of Xuande bowls features iron‑red dragons above blue waves. Examples include one excavated at Jingdezhen (ibid., p. 118, no. 42); one in the National Palace Museum, Taipei (Catalogue of the Special Exhibition of Selected Hsuan‑te Porcelains, 1998, pp. 164–5, no. 55) and one in the Percival David Collection (acc. no. PDF A778).

The dragon’s vigorous, forward‑facing stance on the present moon flask also recalls Xuande prototypes. A closely related composition appears on a stem bowl in the Percival David Collection, where a copper‑red dragon rises from blue waves with all four limbs extended (Rosemary Scott, Imperial Taste, 1989, p. 63, no. 33). While both Xuande and Qianlong dragons share this looping-neck posture, Xuande examples typically show the head in three‑quarter view, whereas Qianlong versions, such as the current moon flask, render it face-forward for greater visual impact.

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