Monochrome II

Monochrome II

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 60. A VERY RARE HUANGHUALI FOLDING STOOL, JIAOWU 17TH CENTURY | 十七世紀 黃花梨交杌.

PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT COLLECTION 重要私人珍藏

A VERY RARE HUANGHUALI FOLDING STOOL, JIAOWU 17TH CENTURY | 十七世紀 黃花梨交杌

Auction Closed

October 9, 06:06 AM GMT

Estimate

300,000 - 500,000 HKD

Lot Details

Description

Property from an Important Collection

A VERY RARE HUANGHUALI FOLDING STOOL, JIAOWU

17TH CENTURY

重要私人珍藏

十七世紀 黃花梨交杌


with beaded-edged curvilinear shaped seat rails drilled for a woven seat, one side of the rails carved with confronting chilong and the reverse with flowers, the round legs mortised, tennoned and lapped to the seat rails and base stretchers, hinged by metal rods passing through holes in their centre and secured on both sides by chrysanthemum-shaped metal plates, reinforced by rectangular plates with ruyi heads, a rectangular footrest with a cusped apron and two feet mortised and tennoned to the front pair of legs and base stretcher, the top applied with a baitong interlocking triple lozenge and corner mounts

57.3 by 37.3 by h. 53.5 cm, 22 ½ by 14 ⅝ by h. 21 in.

The Gangolf Geis Collection.

Christie's New York, 18th September 2003, lot 27.


Gangolf Geis 收藏

紐約佳士得2003年9月18日,編號27

As conveniently lightweight and comfortable seats, folding stools such as the current example were popular in the Ming dynasty among travelling scholars and military officials. This design derives from prototypes known since the Han dynasty, when folding stools were imported by nomadic tribes from Central Asia and popularised by Emperor Lingdi (AD 168-189), who was fascinated by the foreign portable seat. The folding stool appears to be the first elevated type of seat in China, predating the emergence of the rigid frame chair (see Gustav Ecke, 'The Development of the Folding Chair. Notes on the History of the Form of the Eurasian Chair', Journal of the Classical Chinese Furniture Society, vol. 1, no. 1 (Winter, 1990), pp. 11-21). The woodblock print illustration to Lienü Zhuan [Biography of women in ancient China] by Ming dynasty painter Qiu Ying shows an attendant carrying a folding stool behind his master on horseback, suggesting their usage as travelling seats as well as stools for alighting from horses (Wanli period version, vol. 16, p. 147).


Compare a similar stool illustrated in Wang Shixiang, Classic Chinese Furniture, London, 1986, pl. 31; one also carved with chilong on the upper members, illustrated in Karen Mazurkewich, Chinese Furniture. A Guide to Collecting Antiques, Rutland, 2006, pl. 154; another from the collection of Robert H. Ellsworth, sold at Christie's New York, 17th March 2015, lot 40; a stool carved with a floral scroll in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, illustrated in Robert D. Jacobsen, Classical Chinese Furniture, Minneapolis, 1999, pl. 1; a larger example, lacking the chilong, sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 29th November 2012, lot 2008; and another, first sold at Christie's Hong Kong, 31st October 1994, lot 413, and again in these rooms, 11th July 2020, lot 140.


交杌,又名馬札,造型輕巧、可摺疊,便於攜帶,尤為出遊之用。明仇英繪,萬曆時期刻本《列女傳》記錄了一名隨從扛著交杌,跟隨主人馬後,應協助主人上下馬或中途休息之用(卷16,頁147)。交杌源自西域,始見於東漢,又稱胡床,遊牧民族綁在馬背上以便歇息之用。《後漢書.五行志一》記載:「靈帝,好胡服、胡帳、胡床、胡坐、胡飯、胡箜篌、胡笛、胡舞,京都貴族皆競為之。」京城貴族的競相效仿,在中原被廣泛使用,成為中國最早的坐具之一。


王世襄,《明式家具珍賞》,英文版,倫敦,1986年,頁31著錄一例明黃花梨有踏床交杌,框刻螭龍紋,與此交杌可資對比。一例錄於 Karen Mazurkewich,《Chinese Furniture. A Guide to Collecting Antiques》,拉特蘭,2006年,圖版154。安思遠舊藏一例,售於紐約佳士得2015年3月17日,編號40。另見一例,錄於 Robert D. Jacobsen ,《Classical Chinese Furniture》,明尼阿波利斯,1999年,圖版1,但以轉枝花卉為主飾。且參見一尺寸較大之例,也沒綴以螭龍,售於香港佳士得2012年11月29日,編號2008。尚有一例可資參考,初售於香港佳士得1994年10月31日,編號413,後又在香港蘇富比2020年7月11日易手,編號140。