A VERY RARE IMPERIAL CARVED AND PAINTED RED LACQUER KANG TABLE, KANGJI
A VERY RARE IMPERIAL CARVED AND PAINTED RED LACQUER KANG TABLE, KANGJI

QIANLONG PERIOD (1736-1795)

Details
A VERY RARE IMPERIAL CARVED AND PAINTED RED LACQUER KANG TABLE, KANGJI
QIANLONG PERIOD (1736-1795)
The wide, rectangular top painted with a wan diaper ground and the edge of the frame carved with shaped panels enclosing bi discs reserved on a further diaper ground, repeated on the narrow waist, shaped aprons, inward-angled legs, and base stretchers, those on the long sides of tiered form, rising to a central open platform incised with demi-florets and floral scroll and framed by a carved border of further floral scroll
15 1/8 in. (38.3 cm.) high, 46 in. (116.9 cm.) wide, 16¾ in. (42.6 cm.) deep
Provenance
L. Kosloff Chinese Antiques, San Francisco, Paris, and Shanghai, 1958.
John Yeon Collection, Portland, Oregon.

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Lot Essay

The present kang table appears to be part of a group of low rectangular carved red lacquer kang tables that are associated with imperial production during the 18th century. While slight variations on the form exist, these tables are generally found in closely related shapes and with similar decoration. See, for example, the carved red lacquer kang table of similar form, dated to the Qianlong period, in the Qing Court collection, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum: Furniture of the Ming and Qing Dynasties (II), Hong Kong, 2002, p. 151, no. 134. (Fig.1) The illustrated table is carved in openwork on the sides with ruyi heads, which are not found on the present table, and the illustrated table does not feature the same elaborate base stretcher. Commonly shared is the plain lacquered top and heavily carved sides, suggesting that while there may be small differences in the group, the two were likely produced in the Palace workshops for Imperial use.

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