A RARE SILVER PETAL-LOBED STEM CUP
A RARE SILVER PETAL-LOBED STEM CUP
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A RARE SILVER PETAL-LOBED STEM CUP

TANG DYNASTY (AD 618-907)

Details
A RARE SILVER PETAL-LOBED STEM CUP
TANG DYNASTY (AD 618-907)
The small bowl is worked in repoussé to form ten petals, each finely engraved with small birds in flight amidst flowering plants. The lower body is similarly decorated with waterdrop-shaped, convex petals, each engraved with a bird and flowers. The knobbed and lobed foot terminates in a splayed, petal-lobed base decorated with a floral pattern.
2 ¾ in., (7 cm.) diam.; weight 53 g
Provenance
Dr. Johan Carl Kempe (1884-1967) Collection, Sweden, before 1953, no. CK111.
Sotheby's London, Masterpieces of Chinese Precious Metalwork. Early Gold and Silver, 14 May 2008, lot 71.
Literature
Bo Gyllensvärd, Chinese Gold and Silver in the Carl Kempe Collection, Stockholm, 1953, cat. no. 111.
Han Wei, Hai nei wai Tangdai jin yin qi cuibian [Tang Gold and Silver in Chinese and overseas collections], Xi'an, 1989, pl. 53.
Qi Dongfang, Tangdai jin yin qi yan jiu [Research on Tang gold and silver], Beijing, 1999, p. 402, fig. 3-107-4.
Exhibited
Washington, D.C., Smithsonian Institution, Chinese Gold and Silver in the Carl Kempe Collection, 1954-55, cat. no. 111.

Lot Essay

Several silver cups of this elegant shape, similarly decorated on each lobe with various birds in flight amidst plants, have been published. One in the Hakutsuru Art Museum, Kobe, Japan, is illustrated by B. Gyllensvärd, 'T'ang Gold and Silver', B.M.F.EA., No. 29, Stockholm, 1957, pl. 4b. Another from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, and previously in the David Weill Collection, was sold at Christie's New York, 1 December 1994, lot 65. One is illustrated in Tangdai jin yin qi, Zhejiang Municipal Museum and Shaanxi Provincial Museum, 1985, figs. 7 and 8; and another was included in the exhibition, Masterpieces of Chinese Art From the Art Institute of Chicago, Osaka, Japan, Museum of Oriental Ceramics, 1989, no. 25. Two gilt-bronze examples have also been published: one in the collection of Dr. Pierre Uldry, Chinesisches Gold und Silber, Zurich, 1994, p. 151, no. 136; the other in the St. Louis Art Museum, by Clarence W. Kelley, Chinese Gold & Silver in American Collections, The Dayton Art Institute, Dayton, Ohio, 1984, p. 54, no. 20. The decoration on all of these cups is highly formal in its symmetry.

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