| 中文版 English

具体要求

其它要求

-
关闭
A rare twelve-panel throne-back screen inset with famille-rose porcelain panels, Qing dynasty, Jiaqing / Daoguang period
美国
03月25日 晚上9点30分 开拍 / 03月23日 下午3点 截止委托
拍品描述 翻译
Lot Details Description (17) Height of each panel 56? in., 144 cm; Width of each panel 11? in., 28.2 cm Condition report Provenance Collection of the University of La Verne, California. Sotheby’s New York, 30th March 2006, lot 190. Catalogue note A shelter from the wind, a statement of power, an artistic expression – monumental screens like the present played an essential role in the imperial palaces and scholars’ studios of the High Qing period. Typically used as the backdrop to thrones, curving gracefully at each end to frame the Emperor in his splendor, throne-back screens were typically lavishly decorated with complex inlaid and lacquer designs, framed in the most desirable hardwoods of huanghuali and zitan. Related examples from throughout the Qing dynasty remain preserved in situ across the Forbidden City and include a twelve-panel eighteenth century example inlaid with kingfisher feathers (accession no. gu 00210732) and a nine-panel example from the Qianlong period (1736-1795) embellished with jade and hardstones (accession no. gu 00210694), illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum. Furniture of the Ming and Qing Dynasties (II), Hong Kong, 2002, pls 188 and 190 respectively. However, while screens in lacquer, textile and inlay are frequently attested, the present screen is extraordinarily rare in its use of porcelain. Assembled from sixty four individual plaques of imposing size and weight, each formed, glazed and enameled with exceptional skill, the present screen is a rare and unparalleled testament to the technical mastery of the imperial potters. Owing to this technical challenge and the fragility of the material, only two other complete porcelain screens of this type appear to have ever been published, each depicting auspicious figural scenes of Daoist immortals alongside plaques of confronting chilong dragons, flowers and birds, sold at Bonhams London: the first later remounted as a folding screen, 11th May 2017, lot 214; and the second bearing a remarkable resemblance to the present in form and decoration, 15th May 2014, lot 88. Also compare a twelve-leaf example from the collection of T.Y. Chao (1912-1999) depicting scenes from the Xixiang Ji (Romance of the West Chamber), offered in our Hong Kong rooms, 3rd October 2017, lot 3627. The screen depicts vivid scenes of Daoist immortals in the reverie of the mountains. Centred on a scene of the Queen Mother of the West (Xiwangmu) arriving to acclaim, the screen could also be read as a description of the mythical Peach Festival, on which Xiwangmu is said to arrive on her birthday every 3000 years and bestow peaches of immortality to the revelers. These auspicious scenes include: The present screen is emblematic of the finest porcelain decoration of its period. Inheriting the rococo style and scholarly taste of the abdicating Qianlong Emperor (r. 1736-1795), porcelain wares of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century are notable for their fine workmanship and vibrant enamels. Compare closely related figural scenes, lotus scrolls and shou (‘longevity’) characters on the finest vases of the period, including a ruby-ground lantern vase of Jiaqing mark and period, sold in our Paris rooms, 10th December 2019, lot 52; and a pair of lime-green-ground vases of Daoguang mark and period depicting Daoist immortals, sold in these rooms, 21st September 2022, lot 365. Indeed, each plaque of this elaborate composition is an artwork in its own right and, as such, extant plaques of the period are frequently found framed as individual works or reworked into new pieces of furniture. Compare, for example, closely related eighteenth century plaques built into the famous rosewood cabinet from the Lionel Jacob Collection, discussed in Michel Beurdeley, Chinese Furniture, New York, 1979, pls 227 and 228.

本场其它拍品

  • 竞价阶梯
  • 快递物流
  • 拍卖规则
  • 支付方式
竞价区间 加价幅度
0
10
100
50
500
100
1,000
200
2,000
250
5,000
500
10,000
1,000
20,000
2,000
50,000
5,000
100,000
10,000
+

委托价 (已有0次出价)

美元

价格信息

拍品估价:200,000 - 300,000 美元 起拍价格:200,000 美元  买家佣金:
落槌价 佣金比率
0 - 2,000,000 28.00% + VAT
2,000,000 - 8,000,000 22.00% + VAT
8,000,000 - 以上 15.00% + VAT

拍卖公司

Sotheby's
地址: 1334 York Avenue
电话: +1 212 606 7000
邮编: 10021
向卖家提问

小贴士

1. 一般拍卖公司接受的付款方式有以下几种:
现金、信用卡、转账汇款、银行支票、个人支票以及PayPal支付。
使用PayPal支付时,请留意需要在账单金额的基础上额外加上 4% 的手续费。
2. 信用卡的种类有以下几种:
3. 转账汇款时请注意银行手续费
海外拍企会要求足额到账,所以请您在汇款时,选择足额到账,或在汇款金额的基础上加上汇款手续费(如25美金)。
4. 国际转账汇款时, 您需要知道海外拍卖行以下汇款信息:
* 收款人名称
* 收款人地址
* 收款人银行账号
* 收款银行国际编码(8位字母数字组合,必填项, 如: BFKKAT2K)
* 收款银行清算码(9位数字组合,选填项)
* 收款银行名称
* 收款银行地址
5. 运输相关事项
有的海外拍卖行会替您安排和协调运输, 您只需要支付相关的运费及保险费(如您需要)即可;有的海外拍卖行会推荐几家长期合作的运输公司, 这些运输公司有着良好的信誉和高质量的工作效率,您大可放心。您只需要提供您的收货地址, 竞得拍品账单。 运输公司会根据您提供的信息给您报价, 您可以在其中选择最优的报价者来承担运输任务。然后就是付款了, 信用卡是最常用的支付手段, 当然还有其他像PayPal,转账等。
6. 进口通关可能出现的关税
国际运送的包裹在进口清关过程中如需支付关税,需由包裹接受人(即买家)自行承担。 征收标准:具体征收标准和额度以海关通知和解释为准。
7. 禁拍拍品
海外拍卖会可能会出现中国法律禁止交易的物品,如枪支、管制刀具、象牙、犀角等;中国买家不得通过本平台参与上述物品的拍卖活动;任何情形下,买家均须对自己的竞拍行为独立承担责任。
服务热线:400-608-1178
查看全部小贴士