Search Price Results
Wish

LOT 0087

ginger pot; China, Republic Period 1912-1949. Porcelain. Rose family. It presents marks on the base.

[ translate ]

Ginger jar; China, Republic Period 1912-1949.
Porcelain. Pink family.
With marks on the base.
Measurements: 23 x 20 cm (diameter).
Vase with a very wide belly and narrow mouth, of the type known as "Ginger jar", originally used to preserve ginger, especially appreciated in oriental gastronomy and medicine. The piece is richly ornamented, dominated by a figurative scene located in the centre of the belly and conceived as a frieze. The main scene is delimited by two bands with geometric ornamental motifs, the upper one located next to the mouth, where the artist has also introduced small cartouches with flowers inside them, being of particular interest. Returning to the main scene, it features several male figures, whose clothing and physical features define them as mandarins.
The Rose Family style originated at the end of the Kangxi period, the emperor of the Qing dynasty who reigned from 1662 to 1722. The new ornamental style is based on the introduction of new enamels, the most famous of which is pink, after which the style is named. Other new colours were also added, such as opaque yellow, white and the now independent black (until then, in order to fix the black glaze, it had to be covered with a glaze of another colour, usually translucent green). Technically, the most important is opaque white, as it could be mixed with other glazes to achieve a wide range of pastel shades, as well as allowing a smooth tonal gradation that made it possible to successfully imitate Western painting. What defines the Rose Family, therefore, is not the predominance of this colour, but this new polychrome. The new style led to the abandonment of the previously predominant Green Family, characterised by the abundance of this colour and the use of more watery glazes.

[ translate ]

View it on
Estimate
Unlock
Reserve
Unlock
Time, Location
30 Mar 2023
Spain, Barcelona
Auction House
Unlock

[ translate ]

Ginger jar; China, Republic Period 1912-1949.
Porcelain. Pink family.
With marks on the base.
Measurements: 23 x 20 cm (diameter).
Vase with a very wide belly and narrow mouth, of the type known as "Ginger jar", originally used to preserve ginger, especially appreciated in oriental gastronomy and medicine. The piece is richly ornamented, dominated by a figurative scene located in the centre of the belly and conceived as a frieze. The main scene is delimited by two bands with geometric ornamental motifs, the upper one located next to the mouth, where the artist has also introduced small cartouches with flowers inside them, being of particular interest. Returning to the main scene, it features several male figures, whose clothing and physical features define them as mandarins.
The Rose Family style originated at the end of the Kangxi period, the emperor of the Qing dynasty who reigned from 1662 to 1722. The new ornamental style is based on the introduction of new enamels, the most famous of which is pink, after which the style is named. Other new colours were also added, such as opaque yellow, white and the now independent black (until then, in order to fix the black glaze, it had to be covered with a glaze of another colour, usually translucent green). Technically, the most important is opaque white, as it could be mixed with other glazes to achieve a wide range of pastel shades, as well as allowing a smooth tonal gradation that made it possible to successfully imitate Western painting. What defines the Rose Family, therefore, is not the predominance of this colour, but this new polychrome. The new style led to the abandonment of the previously predominant Green Family, characterised by the abundance of this colour and the use of more watery glazes.

[ translate ]
Estimate
Unlock
Reserve
Unlock
Time, Location
30 Mar 2023
Spain, Barcelona
Auction House
Unlock
View it on