Ei yhteyttä palvelimeen
Online-teemahuutokaupat
Ceramic design by Kyllikki Salmenhaara E1118
Huutokauppa:
Carl Oscar Borg – Depicter of the American West F582
Huutokauppa:
Franco Costa F574
Huutokauppa:
A Worldwide Private Collection F579
Huutokauppa:
Japanese Prints & Works of Art F511
Huutokauppa:
Classical Antiques F577
Huutokauppa:
Helsinki Winter Sale F504
Huutokauppa:
Live-huutokaupat
Modern Art & Design 660
Huutokauppa: 19.−20. marraskuuta 2024
Important Winter Sale 661
Huutokauppa: 11.−13. joulukuuta 2024
541
907822

A pair of Chinese hardwood chairs, Qing dynasty (1644-1912).

Lähtöhinta
8 000 - 10 000 SEK
707 - 883 EUR
729 - 911 USD
Vasarahinta
8 000 SEK
Tietoa ostamisesta
Lisätietoja ja kuntoraportit
Cecilia Nordström
Tukholma
Cecilia Nordström
Johtava asiantuntija – itämainen keramiikka & taidekäsityö, eurooppalainen keramiikka ja lasi
+46 (0)739 40 08 02
A pair of Chinese hardwood chairs, Qing dynasty (1644-1912).

Height of back 105 cm. Height of seat 50 cm.

Restored.

Alkuperä - Provenienssi

The Stenbeck Collection Part II. Purschased in Hong Kong in the 1990's.

The Stenbeck Collection Part II. The collection as a whole comprises a wide range of Chinese porcelain produced during the late Ming and early Qing dynasty for the domestic, Japanese and European markets. The collection concentrates on porcelain produced during the interregnum years between the two dynasties. But as an academic collector you can clearly see how he during the years has spanned it further ahead and dived backwards to fulfill the collection.

Mr Stenbeck is an active member of the Swedish Oriental Ceramics society and has been very generous with his knowledge about the transition period, and given numerous lectures of the interesting and often amusing and quixotic development of the free methods of expression, both in decoration and shapes that appears in this period.

The collection was exhibited at the Heinola Museum in Finland in 2000, under the exhibition name “The Liberated Brush”. This name alludes from the withdrawal of Court patronage and greater artistic freedom enjoyed by artisans as they responded to changing commercial pressures at a time of economic and political uncertainty in China.