A RARE BLUE AND WHITE BARBED-RIM ‘FLORAL’ CUP STAND
A RARE BLUE AND WHITE BARBED-RIM ‘FLORAL’ CUP STAND
A RARE BLUE AND WHITE BARBED-RIM ‘FLORAL’ CUP STAND
2 More
A RARE BLUE AND WHITE BARBED-RIM ‘FLORAL’ CUP STAND

HONGWU PERIOD (1368-1398)

Details
A RARE BLUE AND WHITE BARBED-RIM ‘FLORAL’ CUP STAND
HONGWU PERIOD (1368-1398)
The cup stand is of lobed octa-foil form, the thick bracket-lobed sides raise to an everted barbed rim. The interior is moulded with a raised ring encircled by lotus petals, the centre medallion is painted with a peony spray surrounded by a scroll of six chrysanthemum and further eight lotus sprays in the cavetto, the rim is decorated with classic scroll and key fret border to the edge, the exterior is moulded with petal lappets defined in pencilled decoration.
7 ¾ in. (19.5 cm.) diam.
Provenance
Sold at Sotheby’s Hong Kong, 27 October 1992, lot 31

Brought to you by

Pola Antebi (安蓓蕾)
Pola Antebi (安蓓蕾) Deputy Chairman, Asia Pacific, International Director

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

Imperial porcelains from the Hongwu period were painted in either blue-and-white or copper-red. According to Lu Minghua in Mingdai guanyao ciqi, Shanghai, 2007, p. 8, most of the heirloom pieces are copper-red decorated, and underglaze blue wares are much rarer.

Compare to a similar cup stand formerly in the E.T Chow, Matthias Komor, Myron S. Falk and Meiyintang Collections, illustrated by Regina Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, vol. 4, London, 1994-2010, no. 1627; and another included in the Exhibition of Ancient Chinese Ceramics, From the Collection of the Kau Chi Society of Chinese Art, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1981, cat. no. 61.

While a number of cup stands dated to the Hongwu period are recorded, heirloom matching cups are virtually unknown.However, a Hongwu period blue and white cup discovered from the waste heaps of the Ming imperial kilns, decoratedwith peony and chrysanthemum scrolls to the interior, together with a matching cup stand, is illustrated in Imperial Porcelains from the Reigns of Hongwu and Yongle in the Ming Dynasty, Beijing, 2015, no. 31.

More from The Au Bak Ling Collection: The Inaugural Sale

View All
View All