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A SMALL WHITE GLAZED DINGYAO FIGURE OF A SEATED GIRL HOLDING A DOLL, EARLY SONG TO EARLY LIAO DYNASTY
奥地利
09月12日 下午5点 开拍 / 09月10日 下午3点 截止委托
拍品描述

Description

A SMALL WHITE GLAZED DINGYAO FIGURE OF A SEATED GIRL HOLDING A DOLL, EARLY SONG TO EARLY LIAO DYNASTY

Published: Koos de Jong, Small China: Early Chinese Miniatures, 2021, p. 62, fig. 37.

China, Hebei Province, 10th-11th century. Well potted in the form of a kneeling maiden, clad in voluminous robes with finely detailed folds, secured at the waist with a sash. She holds a small doll against her chest with her left hand, while her right hand rests gently upon her thigh. The chubby face of the young girl bearing a charming expression, marked by diminutive eyes, a flat nose, and full lips.

Provenance: V. Li, Casey Building, Hong Kong, 2013. Collection of Dr. Koos de Jong, acquired from the above. A Dutch art historian and collector, Dr. Koos de Jong has worked across several cultural institutions in the Netherlands from 1976, serving as the director of the European Ceramic Work Center in Den Bosch between 1999-2009, before retiring in 2009. He has authored hundreds of articles and several books on Dutch fine and decorative arts from the Middle Ages to the modern era. His scholarly interests expanded to Chinese material culture, culminating in the 2013 publication of Dragon & Horse: Saddle Rugs and Other Horse Tack from China and Beyond, a pioneering study on Chinese equestrian gear. Continuing this line of inquiry, his more recent book published in 2021, Small China: Early Chinese Miniatures, explores the largely overlooked world of Chinese miniature objects, combining archaeological research with art historical insight.
Condition: Old wear, small losses, extensive repairs with associated restorations, otherwise good condition with typical firing irregularities including pitting, dark spots, and glaze recesses. Minor nicks, tiny chips, and encrustations.

Weight: 29.0 g
Dimensions: Height 6.5 cm

Several ceramic figures of a mother, a child or a mother with child, produced during the Song, Jin and Yuan periods, display evidence of deliberate dismemberment of the head. Koos de Jong and other scholars have noted similar practices in Southeast Asia during earlier and contemporaneous periods, particularly in Burma and Thailand, where the ritual decapitation and burial of ceramic figurines depicting nursing mothers with children was likely intended to protect pregnant women and prevent miscarriage or stillbirth. It is purported that the Chinese specimens fulfilled a similar function.

Literature comparison:
Compare a related porcelain figure of a kneeling woman holding a lotus and a basket with misfired white glaze, China, Hebei province, Northern Song dynasty, dated 11th-early 12th century, 7.4 cm high, in the National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution, accession number F1909.387.

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价格信息

拍品估价:150 - 300 欧元 起拍价格:150 欧元  买家佣金: 35.00%

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