- 306
清康熙 五彩山水高士圖詩文盌 |
描述
- Porcelain
來源
紐約蘇富比1994年11月29日,編號314(其一)
心雅堂 (Berwald Oriental Art),倫敦,1996年
展覽
出版
Condition
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準買家應該檢查每件拍品以確認其狀況,蘇富比所作的任何陳述均為主觀看法而非事實陳述。雖然本狀況報告或有針對某拍品之討論,但所有拍賣品均根據印於圖錄內之業務規則以拍賣時狀況出售。
拍品資料及來源
I hate climbing mountains and towers without you,
the clouds and sea of Chu and memories never end,
the sound of mallets at the foot of leafless hills,
in a prefecture of brambles and winter rain.
(Translation by Bill Porter, In Such Hard Times: The Poetry of Wei Ying-wu, Port Townsend, WA, 2009, p. 254-255.)
The poem is preceded by a leaf-shaped seal, and followed by a circular and square seal (both with illegible characters). Though the third and fourth characters of the poem have been changed on the bowl, the meaning remains consistent with the original poem, as translated above.
During the early years of the Kangxi period, the entirely respectable theme of retirement from imperial service was colored by issues of loyalty. Many Ming dynasty scholars opted for exile over service to the new dynastic power whereas others readily accepted change. The device of transforming a two-dimensional painting with its inspirational poetic inscription into a three-dimensional functional object gained new aesthetic heights and favor during the period as a benign means to express the conflicting loyalties of the time.
A related bowl, similarly marked on the base, is illustrated in Kangxi Porcelain Wares from the Shanghai Museum Collection, Hong Kong, 1998, pl. 106. The same catalogue illustrates a second 'landscape and poem' bowl in the Shanghai Museum collection, cat. no. 110, this one with the base unmarked.
Painting an artemisia leaf at the start of a poem and a seal at the end was a convention developed by ceramic artisans in the 17th century. It appears on the present example, as well as on the aforementioned bowl in the Jie Rui Tang Collection, on numerous 'poem and landscape' porcelains in the Shanghai Museum collection (ibid, cat. no. 110), and on vases such as lot 330 in this sale. The leaf and mark may be a device to enhance the 'literati' quality of the porcelain by imitating the distinctive seals used by artists, calligraphers, and collectors to mark their work.