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A delicate Chinese export saucer executed
in the fine black line style known as en grisaille or encre de
Chine,
highlighted with rouge de fer enamel and gilding. The translucent near
eggshell-thin porcelain is decorated with a finely painted domestic scene of a
lady sewing at a table with a friend, as a half-dressed little boy cavorts near
the servant who brings tea. Atop the table are books, a brush pot (bitong),
and a wooden stand bearing a censer and a vase containing coral branches and ruyi
sprig. A band of gold and black fruiting and flowering vines frames the scene
beneath a black double band to the rim.
Produced early in the
乾隆 Qianlong reign,
the exquisite painting quality exhibits a
mastery of drawing, from the detailed rouge de fer wood grain of the
table, to the graceful poses of the women, as well as superb shading technique
shown in both the flowing robes and subtlety of the skin tones. Interior scenes
such as these were done purely in Chinese taste, but proved very popular with
Western consumers, even if they must have been puzzled at some of the furniture
shown.
清代 Qing Dynasty, 乾隆 Qianlong Period (1736-1795)
Diameter: 4-1/2" (11.5 cm)
Condition: Excellent, with a 0.6 cm glaze frit to the rim and slight wear
to the rim gilding,
and one flake to the child's coat.
Reference: For matching border decoration and domestic scenes see
China for the West, Howard and Ayers, London and New York, 1978, vol.I, page
168, nos. 158-159.
Please refer to item #EX-222 when inquiring.
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