Decorated with a “Hundred Antiquities” including bronze vessels, emblems and flower-filled vases – all scattered around the well-potted pear-shaped body and below a ring of floral scrolls. The tall slender neck is painted with lanterns and ribbons hanging below the rolled lip rim. Height 16 cm
Restored fritt by rim.
Purchased from Geoffrey Waters Oriental Ceramics and Works of Art, London, August 1999.
The Avalon Collection.
This collection, which in the main focuses on the Interregnum and Kangxi periods has been both carefully and sensitively formed over the last twenty-five years. The collector, a member of the English Oriental Ceramic Society, has assembled the collection with an eye for provenance whilst purchasing from old European collections, well-established antique dealers and at auction.
Academically, the pieces have been well researched both in terms of their symbolism and narrative themes. In many instances the imagery on the pieces has been referenced to episodes in the romantic and historic novels of Chinese mythology, which were used extensively in the decoration of seventeenth century Chinese porcelain.
The “Hundred Antiquities” is interesting in that it demonstrates what was considered suitable for a scholar’s collection at the time – painting scrolls, brushes, brush-rests, ink stones, brush pots, a stack of books and a chessboard.