Ming Dynasty Tomb Figure This exceptional tomb figure dates to the Ming dynasty (14-15th century). He is glazed in vibrant red and green with black highlighted facial features. Our fellow stands 16 1/2” high and is in excellent condition with no evidence of damage other than that caused by 400-500 years in the tomb and as shown in the pictures. A museum quality piece.
Click for more detail... 2104
Fine Korean Celadon Stem Bowl A fine Korean stem bowl, measuring 6 in diameter by 3 1/2 ins. tall, dating to the 18th century. The bowl is foliate in design and is covered in rich, olive-green celadon glaze. A central floral design in overglaze, raised white and black enamel is surrounded by five similar designs in the cavetto. The foot shows the fine, whitish clay of the body and adherent grains of sand from the kiln. The bowl is in fine and original condition. This was purchased from a Chinese collector. who had a fitted box made for it.
A fine I Hsing teapot made of stone in a pig configuration, measuring approximately 5 1/2 X 3 1/2 ins. dating to the 20th century. It is in fine and original condition.
Our Price: $ 65.00
Click for more detail... 161
Japanese Ikebana Basket A Japanese basket made for ikebana and display of flowers during the tea ceremony, dating to the Meiji period (1868-1912). Woven in an upright fashion of rich, red-brown bamboo that has been exposed to the elements, known in Japan as susutake -- bamboo taken from an old, thatched roof where it was exposed to smoke. It is woven in two layers with the first done in a twill-plaited style and the second in a six-mesh, or hexagonal plait (mutsume-ami). The front of the basket is decorated with inserts representing bamboo leaves. The basket has a woven handle and stands on four feet, one of which is a little short, creating a slight wobble that can be corrected easily. Height = 15 in. to handle. 7 in. to top of basket, 8 1/2 in. across the top. A superb example of the basket-maker’s skill.
Our Price: $ 325.00
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Japanese Bamboo Fruit Basket A Japanese basket made for display of fruit during the tea ceremony, dating to the Meiji period (1868-1912). This basket is woven in old, susutake bamboo in a six-mesh, or hexagonal plait (mutsume-ami). Flat baskets such as this are known as morikago nad were to display fruit duirng the sncha, or green leaf tea, ceremony. This basket can be used just as effectively to display flowers. It stands on three peg feet and measures 14 in. across by 4 1/2 in. high. A superb example of the basket-maker’s skill.
Our Price: $ 250.00
Click for more detail... 1815
Japanese 3-Handled Ikebana Basket A Japanese 3-Handled Ikebana Basket, measuring 12 ins. across X 9 1/2 high, dating to the mid-1900s. The basket has a three handles that join above the square base. The basket shows excellent workmanship, nice color and patina. It is in fine and original condition.
Our Price: $ 150.00
Click for more detail... 1839
Japanese Handled Ikebana Basket A Japanese Handled Ikebana Basket, measuring approximately 7 1/4 ins. square and 9 ins. high, dating to the mid 1900s. The basket shows fine quality workmanship with accents on the handle and an excellent patina. It is in fine and original condition.
Our Price: $ 125.00
Click for more detail... 2186
Japanese Moon Ikebana Basket A Japanese Ikebana Basket of woven bamboo, measuring 11 ins. across and 9 ins. high, dating to the first half of the 20th century. The basket is made in a moon design for hanging on the wall or to set on a table. It is in fine and original condition.
This lovely Chinese dish dates from 1862 to 1874, the reign of the Tongzhi emperor. It is lobulated in design and measures 4” across and is 2 ins. high. The porcelain is of high quality and has a bluish tinge with few imperfections. The dish is decorated around three-quarters of the circumference with a charming family scene in the famille rose palette. There is a four-character Tongzhi mark in seal script on the base, making this “of the mark and period.”
The period before Tongzhi’s reign was marked by civil war in China that led to the destruction of the imperial kilns in Jingdezhen in the 1850’s. Most porcelain produced from this time until that of the Guangzu emperor at the end of the century was of poor quality. This piece is the exception that proves the rule. It is not imperial but represents the fine porcelain pieces done after the kiln was rebuilt or by remaining artisans. Porcelain of this quality with this reign mark is hard to find.
A fine and rare Chinese underglaze blue on white porcelain coffepot with top, measuring 4 3/4 ins. in height by 3 1/2 ins. at its widest, bearing a Guangxu reign mark (1875-1908) in overglaze red. The design is of a three-toed dragon. The spout and rim areas have been clobbered, or enhanced with gold. The design of the item as a miniature coffeepot leads me to believe that this was meant to be part of a child’s set. The coffeepot is in original and excellent condition with no evidence of damage or repairs. A fine, period example of late 19th century Chinese export porcelain.
A beautifully simple and rare, melon ribbed blanc de chine brush washer, measuring 2 1/2 X 3 ins., dating to late 18th - early 19th century. This type of footrim and glaze can be found on Kang Hsi wares, and the piece probably dates to that era. The brush washer comes with its own stand that appears to be a later addition. A beautiful Chinese monochrome for the collector of items for the scholar’s desk or fine antique porcelain.
Our Price: $ 150.00
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19th c. Chinese Famille Verte Charger An exceptional Chinese round charger done in Famille Verte colors with a central painting of maidens and children in a garden scene, bordered by a wide, multicolor overglaze enamel diaper, measuring 13 1/4 ins. in diameter, dating to the mid to late 19th century. The reverse shows a speckled white glaze on a white porcelain body, gray footrim and pontil marks characteristic of late Ching Dynasty porcelain. Some of the colors of the robes have faded from use over time but there is no other structural damage. An exceptional and unusual charger in this palette.
A fine Chinese porcelain bowl designed with four roundels of stylized dragons chasing flaming pearls and a central inner medallion of a flaming pearl in overglaze green, orange and white enamels, dating to the late 19th to early 20th century. The bowl has a four-character hallmark on the base in orange. It is smudged and hard to read. The bottom left character looks like Chinese for prosperity. The bowl is in fine and original condition with one firing defect in the center that shows the underlying orange-brown clay body. There is some pitting of the white glaze.
A fine Chinese blue and white bowl, measuring 7 X 2 3/4 ins., dating to the 17th century. The bowl is decorated with underglaze blue that has a distinctly purple color. Flowers are painted on the cavetto and center; landscape scenes are painted on the exterior. The bowl has a typical orange peel feel and the footrim shows a orange clay. The rim shows mushikui, or a moth-eaten appearance. This is typical of ko-sometsuke, or old Chinese blue and white wares shipped to Japan as well as better quality Chinese domestic wares made in the Ming Tiangi period (1621-27). There is one old 1/4 in. rim chip. This is a recent acquisition from the estate of Helen Tukey, auctioned by Freeman’s of Philadelphia in a catalogued sale. The bowl was vetted by the Freeman’s staff for this sale. It is in fine and original condition.
A Chinese prunus vase in underglaze blue over white, dating to the late Ching Dynasty, measuring 12 ins. tall. The vase has one small rim depression under the glaze from the time of firing. It bears a 6 character, false Kang Hsi reign mark in underglaze blue on the base. I date this vase to the late 19th - early 20th century.
Our Price: $ 200.00
Click for more detail... 802
Chinese Octagonal Multicolor BowlA Chinese octagonal bowl decorated with mulicolor over glaze enamel, measuring approximately 8 ins across, dating to the early 20th century. The bowl is nicely decorated on the cavetto with floral designs around a central medaliion of two ducks in the water. The exterior is done in multicolor enamel with carved or pressed accents of flowers and vines on a yellow background. It is heavily potted and has an overall orange peel effect to the white glaze. There is rubbing and enamel loss of one edge of the bowl as shown in the second picture. The base bears a false Qian Long six character reign mark.
Our Price: $ 200.00
Click for more detail... 2493
Qing Dyn. Celadon Dragon/Phoenix Bowl A beautiful, thinly-potted Chinese celadon bowl measuring 7 1/2 x 2 3/4 ins., dating to late the Qing Dynasty. It has a pale green celadon glaze over a pure, white clay porcelain body. The bowl was formed over a mould of a dragon in flames. The bare rim and the glazed foot and footrim show that it was fired upside down. This was a typical way of firing Northern Song bowls. However, do not confuse this bowl with one from the Song Dynasty. The porcelain body (it has a distinct ring), the "machined" smoothness of the body and the style of the dragon all place this in a later period, most likely late Qing when these classic wares where imitated. It is in fine and original condition.
Our Price: $ 350.00
Click for more detail... 2218
Jun Kiln Lion Handle Blue Vase A Chinese Jun kiln vase, measuring 9 - 10 ins tall and 5 ins. across. The vase is made of yellow, sandy earthenware known as sha t’ai (what Hobson calls “soft Ch’un”). The foot is short, flared, and unglazed upwards to 2-3 inches. The body rises in a gradual flare to a gourd shape that tapers in at the shoulder and flares into a 6-petal mouth. There is an applied petal design around the shoulder as well as applied designs of paired fish on either side of the upper body. Two lion’s head handles with pierced nostrils adorn the sides. The rich blue body glaze is thick and opalescent. It has some purple splotches and is finely crackled in different areas. The mouth is brown as are the upper edges of the applied designs where the glaze ran off during firing. The clay body can be seen on the unglazed portions, lying beneath what appears to be encrusted dirt from burial. There is one linear crack in the side from firing that measures approximately 5 inches. Flare mouth vases like this were popular in the Song Dynasty but were made into the Qing Dynasty. This vase has characteristics of the Song dynasty earthenware ceramics.
Our Price: $ 200.00
Click for more detail... 480
Chinese Hallmark Peacock Bowl A fine Chinese white porcelain bowl with a beautifully-drawn peacock and flame design in overglaze enamels on the exterior, measuring 5 3/4 X 3 ins., probably dating to the Republic Period. The bowl bears the Ju Ren Tang Zhi, or Hall Where Benevolence Resides hallmark on its base. There is an old, sealed, hairline crack.
Our Price: $ 225.00
Click for more detail... 2417
Chinese Junyao Square Lamp A Chinese Junyao lamp measuring 5 ins. square at the base and 3 ins. high, dating to the Song Dynasty. The candleholder is made of brown clay. The unglazed, recessed rim around the base suggests that this item once had a cover. The interior glaze is deep blue/green and brown. The rough potting of the piece indicates that this was made for everyday household use.
Our Price: $ 100.00
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