Lot Essay
Basins of this form are modelled after Yongle and Xuande prototypes from the early 15th century. Interestingly, while there are considerable number of early Ming blue and white basins preserved in museum and private collections, extremely few Yongzheng basins of this type have survived.
According to Qing dynasty palace archives, this type of basin was known as ‘blue and white Western hat-form washer’. One record dating to Qianlong 3rd year (1778) 25th day of the 6th month, the Qianlong Emperor decreed that:
‘A Xuande blue and white Western hat-form washer’ was to be delivered to Tang Ying at the imperial kilns, where new copies based on this were to be fired. After which, the Xuande prototype should be returned to the porcelain storage within the palace.
For a Yongle basin of very similar shape and design, one can refer to the example formerly in the Le Cong Tang Collection and sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 27 November 2017, lot 8002 (fig. 1). These early Ming porcelain prototypes are in turn based on metal basins from Islamic regions in the Near East, such as a Syrian/Egyptian brass basin with silver inlay dated to the 14th century in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, illustrated by Feng Xianming, ‘Yongle and Xuande Blue-and-White Porcelain in the Palace Museum’, Chinese Ceramics Selected Articles from Orientations 1982-1998, Hong Kong, 1999, p. 177, fig. 10 (fig. 2).
Two Yongzheng-marked examples of identical shape and design have been published.
1) The first is in the National Palace Museum Collection, illustrated in Pleasingly Pure and Lustrous: Porcelains from the Yongle Reign (1403-1424) of the Ming Dynasty, Taipei, 2017, p. 163 (fig. 3);
2) the second is in the Beijing Palace Museum Collection, illustrated in Gugong Bowuyuan cang Qingdai yuyao ciqi [Porcelains from the Qing dynasty imperial kilns in the Palace Museum collection], vol. 1, pt. II, Beijing, 2005, pl. 46 (fig. 4).
The current lot is possibly the only Yongzheng-marked basin in private collections.
According to Qing dynasty palace archives, this type of basin was known as ‘blue and white Western hat-form washer’. One record dating to Qianlong 3rd year (1778) 25th day of the 6th month, the Qianlong Emperor decreed that:
‘A Xuande blue and white Western hat-form washer’ was to be delivered to Tang Ying at the imperial kilns, where new copies based on this were to be fired. After which, the Xuande prototype should be returned to the porcelain storage within the palace.
For a Yongle basin of very similar shape and design, one can refer to the example formerly in the Le Cong Tang Collection and sold at Christie’s Hong Kong, 27 November 2017, lot 8002 (fig. 1). These early Ming porcelain prototypes are in turn based on metal basins from Islamic regions in the Near East, such as a Syrian/Egyptian brass basin with silver inlay dated to the 14th century in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, illustrated by Feng Xianming, ‘Yongle and Xuande Blue-and-White Porcelain in the Palace Museum’, Chinese Ceramics Selected Articles from Orientations 1982-1998, Hong Kong, 1999, p. 177, fig. 10 (fig. 2).
Two Yongzheng-marked examples of identical shape and design have been published.
1) The first is in the National Palace Museum Collection, illustrated in Pleasingly Pure and Lustrous: Porcelains from the Yongle Reign (1403-1424) of the Ming Dynasty, Taipei, 2017, p. 163 (fig. 3);
2) the second is in the Beijing Palace Museum Collection, illustrated in Gugong Bowuyuan cang Qingdai yuyao ciqi [Porcelains from the Qing dynasty imperial kilns in the Palace Museum collection], vol. 1, pt. II, Beijing, 2005, pl. 46 (fig. 4).
The current lot is possibly the only Yongzheng-marked basin in private collections.