Ref: AA21
£ 6,500
Price is subject to availability and market conditions.
A large Chinese Transitional blue and white jar and cover, mid 17th century, the ovoid boy finely painted with insects amid lotus, prunus and other floral sprays, the neck with pendant leaves, the domed cover with blossom, on a raised foot, 29cm high,
Condition:
Condition: Typical minor glaze imperfections. Cover has two splinter chips to the rim. Body has a chip to the upper rim (as photographed) with a crack emanating from it, approximately 10cm long. There
Notes:
By the mid-sixteenth century, Chongzhen was not able to defend the northern frontier against the Manchu. When the rebels reached the capital Beijing in 1644, he committed suicide, ending the Ming dynasty. The Manchu formed the succeeding Qing dynasty. The 'transitional' period, considered to have started with the death of the Wanli Emperor in 1620 and lasting until the Manchu takeover, was a period of great creativity within the ceramics industry. Without official imperial patronage, potters diversified and focused on other markets, including scholars and traders (both European and Japanese), and thus the tumultuous Transitional period before the formation of the Qing represents an innovative and dynamic chapter of Chinese ceramic production.
For a similarly decorated jar see, Feng-Chun MA, ‘Chinese Porcelain from the Wanli to Kangxi Period’, p. 102, no. 46.