AN IMPORTANT AND EXTREMELY RARE RU ‘SKY-BLUE’ TEA BOWL
AN IMPORTANT AND EXTREMELY RARE RU ‘SKY-BLUE’ TEA BOWL
AN IMPORTANT AND EXTREMELY RARE RU ‘SKY-BLUE’ TEA BOWL
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AN IMPORTANT AND EXTREMELY RARE RU ‘SKY-BLUE’ TEA BOWL
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A STAR IN THE MORNINGAN EXTREMELY RARE SONG RU WARE BOWLRosemary Scott, Senior International Academic ConsultantIt is a tribute to the extraordinary visual and tactile qualities of imperial Ru ware that the stunning Ru bowl in the current sale immediately entrances the eye and entices the hand. The perfect melding of shape and colour, as well as the lustrous internal texture and silken feel of the glaze reach across the centuries and encapsulate the refined aesthetic for which these rare ceramics are famous. The combination of remarkable beauty and great rarity has made Ru wares the pinnacle to which each successive generation of collectors has aspired since the late Northern Song period. Of all the ceramics made during China’s long cultural history, these wares have had the greatest allure for both imperial and literati connoisseurs alike. When in the Ming and Qing dynasties the designation ‘Five Famous Wares of the Song dynasty’五大名窯, was employed, Ru汝was named along with Guan 官, Ge哥, Ding定and Jun鈞. However, Ru has remained preeminent, even within this celebrated group. Such has been the veneration for imperial Ru wares, that they have continuously been treasured since the time of their production in the late 11th-early 12th century to the present day. Not only were they sought-after by the succeeding Southern Song court, they were greatly prized by both Ming and Qing emperors, and potters of those dynasties were required by their imperial patrons to try and reproduce the elusive blue glaze of Ru wares. Their subtle beauty and the fact that even today less than 100 complete Ru ware vessels are recognised in international collections – the vast majority in museums - has contributed to the reverence with which Ru wares are regarded. In the catalogue to the exhibition of Ru wares held at the Palace Museum, Beijing, in 2015, the authors provided an illustrated list of 90 Ru wares in museums and private collections around the world - only eight were in private hands (see Selection of Ru Ware – The Palace Museum’s Collection and Archaeological Excavation 《汝瓷雅集 故宮博物院珍藏及出土汝瓷器薈萃》, Beijing, 2015, ‘Appendix’, pp. 283-305). Perhaps equally significant in the context of the current bowl is the fact that only two bowls were included in the list of 90 Ru pieces listed in the Appendix. It is also interesting that one of those listed bowls bears an inscription which makes very clear the fact that bowls, as opposed to dishes, were ‘as rare as stars in the morning’ even in the 18th century. The inscription is inside the famous Ru ware bowl from the collection of Sir Percival David (PDF 3, illustrated by Rosemary Scott in Imperial Taste – Chinese Ceramics from the Percival David Foundation, Los Angeles, 1989, pp. 34-5, no. 11). It is an imperial inscription from the brush of the Qianlong Emperor (r. 1736-95), bearing a date of AD 1786. This laudatory text includes the lines:至今盤多椀艱致‘Many [old] dishes have survived, but bowls are difficult to find.內府藏盤數近百There are more than a hundred dishes stored in the Palace,椀則晨星見一二Yet bowls are as rare as stars in the morning.’The inscription makes it clear that the Percival David bowl was in the collection of the Qianlong Emperor, but it seems very likely that this bowl was already in the imperial collection even before the emperor Qianlong’s reign. The Percival David Foundation was given by Lady David a large handscroll entitled Gu wan tu (古玩圖), ‘Scroll of Antiquities’, which was painted by an anonymous court artist in the sixth year of the Yongzheng reign (AD 1728). On the scroll are a wide variety of treasures from the imperial collection, including ceramics, bronzes, and jades. Among the ceramics is depicted a bowl bearing such a striking resemblance to the David bowl that it seems reasonable to assume that they are one and the same. The bowl on the hand scroll even has the same copper band around the lip, and similar crackle pattern (illustrated by Rosemary Scott in Imperial Taste – Chinese Ceramics from the Percival David Foundation, op. cit., p. 35, fig. 17). The 1728 scroll and another from the same series dated to 1729, now in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (see E.S. Rawski and J. Rawson (eds.), China – The Three Emperors 1662-1795, London, 2005, pp. 252-55, nos. 168 and 169), both depict a small number of Ru wares, which must have been in the imperial collection during the reign of the Yongzheng emperor (r. 1723-35) – providing further evidence of the esteem in which Ru wares were held by this most discerning of Qing emperors. The precise dates for the production of Ru wares are not yet definitely established, but the Chinese scholar陳萬里Chen Wanli suggested an approximate period from 1086 to 1106 AD – only 20 years – during which Ru wares were used by the Northern Song court. In part Chen based this dating on two Song dynasty texts - the Xuanhe feng shi Gaoli tujing (宣和奉使高麗圖經, Illustrated Account of an Official Mission to Korea during the Xuanhe Reign) by Xu Jing (徐兢 1091-1153) and the Tan zhai biheng坦齋筆衡by Ye Zhi葉寘, who was writing in the early 13th century. Other scholars have suggested that the period of production may have been just a little longer - perhaps as long as 40 years - but all agree that imperial Ru wares were only produced for a very short time and inevitably the quantity made was small. The limited scale of production was due not only to the brief period of production, but also to the fact that Ru wares appear to have been fired in characteristic northern Chinese mantou (饅頭 bread-bun) kilns, which had a very small firing chamber. In addition, each Ru vessel would have been fired in a saggar (匣a clay box - to protect it from debris in the kilns) and so every individual piece would have taken up even more space in the firing chamber. Finds of biscuit-fired vessels at the kiln site also suggest that, at least some, imperial Ru wares were first fired without glaze – probably to a relatively low temperature in order to remove water from the clay body – and then fired a second time, with glaze, to a higher temperature. While the removal of the water in the first firing would have aided the production of a good final glaze quality, nevertheless there would have been some losses each time the pieces were fired – further reducing the final number of wares.The height of imperial Ru ware production was during the reign of the Northern Song Emperor Huizong ( 徽宗 r. 1100-1126). While he may not have been particularly skilful in governing of the Empire, Emperor Huizong has traditionally been greatly admired as a collector, artist and aesthete, and the refined aesthetics which characterised his reign were extremely influential in the succeeding centuries. Huizong’s reputation as an antiquarian as well as an aesthete was due to the publication of illustrated records of his collection of antiques, as well as to the contemporary art made for his court and temples, which marked his reign as perhaps the most culturally inspiring in Chinese history.Ru ware is also important because it seems that it may have been the first ceramic ware which was specifically ordered by the imperial court, as opposed to simply being sent as tribute. Various texts, including Notes from an Aged Scholar’s Hut (Laoxue’an biji 老學庵筆記) by 陸遊 Lu Yu (AD 1125-1210), state that white Ding wares fell from favour with the imperial court because they had ‘awns’ ( 芒 mang), and were replaced by Ru wares.故都時定 器不大禁中惟用汝器 以 定器有芒也This transference of imperial favour from white wares to a type of fine celadon ware is not so surprising when it is remembered that appreciation of another type of fine bluish-grey glazed celadon ware had already been established at the Song dynasty court. This was Yue ware from Zhejiang province, one of the first Chinese ceramic wares to be appreciated for its own aesthetic qualities. Yue wares had been sent as tribute to both the Tang and Song courts, and it is estimated that some 170,000 pieces of tribute Yue ware are recorded for the first three decades of the Northern Song period (i.e. AD 960-990). The taste for celadon ware was thus well established by the latter part of the Northern Song period. There is an interesting section in Descriptions of an Embassy to Korea during the Xuanhe Reign (Xuanhe fengshi Gaoli tujing 宣和奉. 使高麗圖經) by Xu Jing 徐兢 which was compiled in AD 1124, which noted of ceramics at the Korean court that: ‘ …the vases still imitate the Ding wares. The censers are of the finest quality, the rest are all of the old secret colour of Yuezhou and similar to the new wares from Ruzhou’.There is a reference to Ru ware manufacture in the 清波雜志Qingbo Zazhi written in AD 1192 by 周輝Zhou Hui of the Southern Song, where it is noted that:汝窑宫中禁燒,內,有瑪瑙末為油惟供御揀退方許出賣近尤艱得‘Ru ware was fired for the imperial court, and agate was used in its glaze. It was only after pieces required by the court had been selected that others could be sold. Recently these have been very difficult to find.’ Thus, these wares appear to have been made specifically for the court, and only those not selected by the court could be sold. The author of this text was writing in 1192, and already Ru wares were scarce. It is also interesting that agate was reportedly being included in the glaze composition.The inscription on the base of a dish in the Percival David Collection (PDF A58), which is recorded in the Qianlong yu zhi shi ji (Collected Works of the Emperor Qianlong), and entitled ‘On a dish of Ru ware’ repeats the latter assertion.It may be translated as reading:趙宋青窑建汝州‘The qing [green/blue] ware kiln of the Zhao [ruling house] of theSong dynasty was founded at Ruzhou.傳聞瑪瑙末為油Tradition says that powdered carnelian [agate] was used in the glaze,而今景德無斯法Nowadays the method is not used at Jingdezhen.亦自出藍寳色浮Also, it produced a natural blue and the precious colour floated [in theglaze].乾隆己亥夏御題Inscribed by order of the Emperor in the summer of the yi hai year ofthe Qianlong period [AD 1779].’The implication is that no expense was spared in the composition of these glazes – as would befit an imperial ware. As the main constituent of agate is silicon dioxide, while it owes its colour to iron, and both these are to be found in Ru (as well as all other celadon) glazes it is quite possible that agate was added to the Ru glaze. Chinese researchers have found ample literary evidence that fine quality agate was being mined in Ruzhou in Song times, particularly in the Zhenghe reign (AD 1111-18). Among the records, they found references to large quantities of high-quality agate being reported to the emperor, and one reference in the section on Mining from the Song Shi ( 宋 史 Song History) names the source of this agate as the town of Qingling 青嶺 in Ru prefecture. This is the present-day town of Daying 大 營 in Baofeng County 寶豐縣, only five Chinese miles from the kiln site at Qingliangsi 清涼寺. It is, therefore, more than possible that this precious material was added to the imperial wares made at the local kiln.The site of the kiln producing imperial Ru ware has now been identified as being located at Qingliangsi. In the last thirty years extensive archaeological and textual research has been published in China. Earlier research into historical textual references to Ru ware was, however, undertaken in the 1930s by the British collector and scholar Sir Percival David (1892-1964). As a collector, Sir Percival pursued Ru wares with dedication, and managed to accumulate the largest collection of Ru wares outside China. As a scholar, he undertook extensive research into the ware, with particular emphasis on references in historical Chinese literary sources. In 1936 he presented his findings in a paper entitled ‘A Commentary on Ju Ware’ (see Sir Percival David, ‘A Commentary on Ju Ware’, Transactions of the Oriental Ceramic Society, Vol. 14, 1936-7, pp. 18-69), which was published, with reproductions of the relevant pages of the Chinese volumes. Even 80 years later, this assemblage of literary references still provides a useful tool for scholars. Nevertheless, at the time of his death in 1964 the actual site of the Ru kiln remained a tantalizing mystery.However, in 1986 researchers from the Shanghai Museum noted the discovery of a Ru kiln site in the village of Qingliangsi, Daying, Baofeng county in Henan province and in 1987 they published a report of their findings in Chinese (Wang Qingzheng 汪慶正, Fan Dongqing 范冬青 and Zhou Lili 周麗麗, Ruyao de faxian 汝窑的發現 The Discovery of Ru Kiln, Shanghai, 1987), followed in 1991 by an expanded volume in English (Wang Qingzheng, Fan Dong-qing, Zhou Li-li (Translated by Lillian Chin and Xu Jie), The Discovery of Ru Kiln - A Famous Song-ware Kiln of China, Hong Kong, 1991). Further reports were published in Chinese journals. In 1990 an extended report was published in Wenwu by the Henan Cultural Relics Research Institute (Henan Cultural Relics Research Institute, ‘Investigation and trial dig at the Ru kiln site at Qingliangsi, Baofeng, Henan’, Wenwu, 1989:11, pp 1-14). Much further research, publications, and scholarly exhibitions in both China and Japan have followed in the succeeding years. In addition to the Qingliangsi site, other sites in the area have been excavated, and at one of these ceramics have been found that seem closely linked to imperial Ru ware. This kiln site is at 張公巷 Zhanggongxiang 汝州 Ruzhou, just south-east of Ruzhou City. In 2004 two square areas totalling some 124 square metres were excavated. These revealed the foundations of four buildings, four wells, 6 cooking ranges, 79 ash-pits and an elutriation pond (for separating out raw materials) and a wealth of ceramics and kiln furniture. The stratigraphy is complex but the archaeologists have suggested that the kiln site was in production from the late Northern Song to the early Yuan period. The relation of the Zhanggongxiang material to Ru ware has been the subject of much discussion amongst scholars, and several have suggested that the Zhanggongxiang wares may mark an intermediate step between imperial Ru wares and the wares later produced in at Hangzhou for the Southern Song court.The 1989 archaeological excavation report for Qingliangsi reinforced the point made in earlier reports that a much wider range of shapes and decoration were to be found on the excavated imperial Ru wares than had been seen on those handed down. The scholars who reported on the excavated Ru material in the 1980s and 1990s also noted that a wide range of ceramic types were made at this site, including whitewares, black-wares, various types of greenware, sancai wares, Jun-type wares, and brown-glazed wares. However, the most important of all the types found at Qingliangsi were the ‘official’ or ‘imperial’ Ru wares. In 2000 further excavations by Henan archaeologists uncovered an area of 500 square metres with a number of kilns, workshops, and storage pits as well as a wealth of material related to the making of ceramic wares, and a considerable quantity of ceramics. Of the ceramics found there, 98% were of imperial Ru type. An indication of the care which was taken in firing imperial Ru wares can be seen in the fact that, as mentioned above, the vessels were seen to have been fired inside clay saggars, and also the fact that pyrometric testers and their strands, were found in at the kiln site. These testers were used to test the temperature and atmosphere of the firing, and ensure that the conditions were perfect for that particular glaze batch.The colour of the imperial Ru glaze may range from pale ‘duck egg’ blue to the soft sky blue of the current bowl, and has an almost ethereal quality. The majority of Ru ware glazes have a delicate crackle – much less obvious than that seen on Southern Song Guan wares or Ge wares – although a very small number bear a crackle-free glaze. This would appear to be the first instance when a glaze was deliberately fired with the intention that it would crackle, and it would have taken sophisticated control of constituents and firing to ensure that the correct subtle crackling occurred. The crackle on the current bowl is particularly delicate and only presents itself to those fortunate enough to handle it.Ru wares are characteristically fully glazed - including the foot - and were fired on spurred setters, which left tiny elliptical, sesame seed-shaped, marks in the glaze. In most cases, it was the base of the vessel which rested on the spurred setter. However, in the case of some very special pieces it was the narrow lower edge of the foot which stood on the tiny spurs. This is the case with the current bowl and it is just possible to see the three, minute, marks on the edge of its foot, which were left by the spurs. Interestingly the only other known bowl of this size and shape, which was excavated from the site of the Qingliangsi kiln, was also fired in this precarious manner on three tiny spurs (see Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka, Northern Song Ru Ware – Recent Archaeological Findings, Osaka, 2009, pp. 152-3 and 267, no. 67) (fig. 1). The only other well-known pieces to be fired in this way are certain types of Ru bowl-stand such as the example with five-petalled flange in the collection of Sir Percival David (see Rosemary Scott, Imperial Taste – Chinese Ceramics from the Percival David Foundation, op. cit., p. 37, no. 13). The Percival David bowl-stand and a similar Ru ware bowl-stand which was excavated at the Qingliangsi kiln site (see Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka, Northern Song Ru Ware – Recent Archaeological Findings, op. cit., pp. 156-7 and 267, no. 69)(fig. 2), both have the marks of five small spurs on the bottom of the foot. This placement of the edge of a foot ring on tiny spurs was a remarkably risky venture. The potter undertaking this firing method had to hope that the foot ring of the bowl or bowlstand and the spurred setter would shrink by the same amount and at the same rate during firing. If there was any difference in shrinkage the vessel would have fallen off the spurs and the piece would be ruined.Given the extreme rarity of this firing method and the risks concomitant with its application, it seems likely that it may have been used only by special command. Surely no potter would court such a strong likelihood of disaster unless the order to do so came directly from the emperor. It is also interesting to consider whether the bowls and bowl-stands fired in this way were originally intended to be used together. Would the current bowl have stood on a bowl-stand like that belonging to Sir Percival David? Comparison of the relative sizes suggest that this is a possibility and they would have looked very elegant together.Ru wares, however, continued to be greatly valued after the fall of the Northern Song.Under attack from the Jurchen invaders the Emperor Huizong abdicated in January AD 1126. He was succeeded by his son, 趙桓Zhao Huan, who ruled as Emperor Qinzong 欽宗 until March 1127, when he too abdicated, having surrendered to the Jurchen in January of the same year. In May 1127 both former emperors were forcibly taken by the Jurchen invaders to the latter’s tribal home in Manchuria. Following his brother’s abdication in March, Huizong’s ninth son 趙構Zhao Gou declared himself emperor in June 1127, at what was then known as the Song’s southern capital at 應天府Yingtianfu (modern 商丘 Shangqiu) in Henan province. He would become known as Emperor Gaozong 高宗 (r. AD 1127-62). Under further threat from the Jin, Emperor Gaozong fled to Lin’an ( 臨安 modern Hangzhou) in south-eastern Zhejiang province, where he established his ‘travelling palace’ in 1129. It was this move south, known euphemistically as ‘crossing the river’, that caused later scholars to distinguish the Northern Song and the Southern Song periods. Much of Huizong’s treasured collection had either been destroyed or captured by the Jurchen invaders, and the members of the Southern Song court had brought little with them on their journey south. The products of the Ru kilns were no longer available to them, but fascination with Ru wares continued.The report of one specific occasion clearly demonstrates the prestige still attached to Ru wares in the Southern Song period. In chapter nine of Memoirs of Wulin ( 武林舊事 Wulin jiushi) written by Zhou Mi ( 周密 AD 1232-98) in the 13th century, there is a description of a visit by Emperor Gaozong to the home of a favoured official by the name of Zhang Jun ( 張俊 AD 1086-1154), who had fought for the Song during the war with the Jurchen, and who was said to be the wealthiest man in southern China during the reign of Emperor Gaozong, largely because of the grants of land with which the emperor had rewarded him. The visit to the Zhang Mansion took place in the tenth month of the twenty-first year of the Shaoxing period (November AD 1151). At the banquet given for some 155 guests in the emperor’s honour many precious gifts were offered to him, and alongside the gold, pearls, paintings, fine silks, peacock feathers, and other treasures, were 16 items of Ru ware.高宗幸張府節次略紹興二十一年十月,高宗幸清河郡王第,供進御筵節次如後。安民靖難功臣太傅靜江、寧武、靖海軍節度使醴泉觀使清河郡王臣張俊進奉⋯⋯汝窯:酒瓶一對、洗一、香爐一、香盒一、香毬一、盞四隻、盂子二、出香一對、大匳一、小匳一)。It is undoubtedly the case that, not surprisingly, the early Guan wares produced in the Southern Song period were closely based on Ru wares, not only in their shapes and glazes, but also in their firing techniques. This admiration for Northern Song Ru wares continued in the Ming dynasty, and in the Xuande reign the potters at the imperial kilns at Jingdezhen attempted to recreate Song Ru-type glazes on the white porcelain bodies of Jiangxi. Examples have been excavated from the Xuande stratum at Zhushan (see Imperial Porcelain of the Yongle and Xuande Periods Excavated from the Site of the Ming Imperial Factory at Jingdezhen, Hong Kong, 1989, pp. 276-7, no. 97).Ru ware was also greatly treasured by the Qing emperors, as is clear from the Qianlong inscriptions applied to Ru wares still in the National Palace Museum (see Obtaining Refined Enjoyment - The Qianlong Emperor’s Taste in Ceramics, Taipei, 2012, pp. 68-91, nos. 10- 22) (figs. 3a, 3b) and the Palace Museum, Beijing (see Porcelain of the Song Dynasty (I), The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, 32, Hong Kong, 1996, pp. 2-3, no.1 and pp. 8-9, no. 7).There is also clear evidence that the Yongzheng Emperor was also a great admirer of Song Ru wares. That evidence comes not only from the two imperial scrolls dating to 1728 and 1729 depicting treasures in his collection, mentioned above, but from the writings of the great imperil kiln director Tang Ying ( 唐英, 1682-1756). It was in the last year of the Yongzheng reign, AD 1735, that Tang Ying wrote his Taocheng jishi beiji 《陶成紀事碑記》(Commemorative Stele on Ceramic Production). On this stele Tang Ying recorded copies of Song dynasty Ru ware in his list of fifty-seven types of ceramic wares made for the court:仿銅骨無紋汝釉:仿宋器貓食盤人面洗色澤This passage has been translated by Peter Lam as:‘Ru glaze without crackle on a ‘copper’ body, copied from a dish-washer of the Song dynasty’ (see Shimmering Colours – Monochromes of the Yuan to Qing Periods – The Zhuyuetang Collection, Hong Kong, 2005, p. 44). In the National Palace Museum, Taipei catalogue to their 2006 exhibition Grand View: Special Exhibition of Ju Ware from the Norther Sung Dynasty 《北宋汝窯特展》the authors suggest that the shape called 貓食盤 maoshi pan (literally cat’s food bowl) in the 1735 stele text is in fact what is usually referred to as a ‘narcissus bowl’ of oval shape and with four low feet (see View: Special Exhibition of Ju Ware from the Norther Sung Dynasty 《北宋汝窯特展》, 2006, pp 32-61, nos. 7-9). (fig. 4) The three examples in the National Palace Museum all bear Qianlong laudatory inscriptions (see Obtaining Refined Enjoyment - The Qianlong Emperor’s Taste in Ceramics, Taipei, 2012, pp. 82-7, nos. 17-19). Ru ware vessels of this form are shown being used as planters in a number of Qing court paintings. It is possible that in the case of the narcissus bowl form mentioned on the stele, that Song dynasty Ru ware vessels may have been sent from the court to Jingdezhen in order for them to be copied. However, this is much clearer in another entry on the Taocheng jishi beiji list, which notes:仿銅骨魚子紋汝釉,仿內發宋器色澤This has been translated by Peter Lam as:‘Ru glazes with fish-roe crackle on a copper body, copied from a specimen of the Song sent from the Palace’.The Yongzheng Emperor was obviously willing to send precious Song Ru wares from Beijing to Jingdezhen in order to ensure that potters working at the imperial Qing kilns were able to produce an accurate copy of the glaze and possibly also the shape. The description of ‘copper’ body probably refers to the fact that where the glaze on Song dynasty Ru wares does not cover the body of the vessel during firing, the surface of the exposed body material re-oxidises when air is allowed into the kiln at the end of the firing process and the exposed area takes on a reddish colour. Lam has noted that this ‘copper’ body was recreated on Yongzheng copies of Ru ware (see Peter Y.K. Lam, ‘Qing Monochromes and Tang Ying’, A Millennium of Monochromes, Geneva, 2018, p. 156).The inexorable attraction of these exquisite Northern Song Ru wares continues to the present day. Their subtle beauty and their rarity render them the ultimate goal for collectors, and even among Ru wares the current bowl is undoubtedly one of the rarest and one of the most beautiful.PROPERTY FROM A JAPANESE PRIVATE COLLECTION
AN IMPORTANT AND EXTREMELY RARE RU ‘SKY-BLUE’ TEA BOWL

NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY, LATE 11TH-EARLY 12TH CENTURY

Details
AN IMPORTANT AND EXTREMELY RARE RU ‘SKY-BLUE’ TEA BOWL
NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY, LATE 11TH-EARLY 12TH CENTURY
The bowl is exquisitely potted with rounded sides supported on a short foot, rising to a slightly tapering mouth. It is covered overall with a subtly crackled unctuous glaze of soft, attractive greyish-blue tone, thinning at the rims to reveal the ashen body underneath. The foot ring has three tiny, sesame-shaped spur marks.
4 in. (10.2 cm.) diam., Japanese wood boxes, one inscribed Seiji Chawan (celadon tea bowl)
Provenance
Kobijutsu Kusaba (founded in 1905), Kurume, Kyushu, acquired prior to 1941
Collection of Mr. Yuzura Sato (1917-1996), scholar of French Literature at Kyushu University and Hiroshima University, acquired from the above in the early 1950s
A Japanese private collection
Literature
The Beauty of Song Ceramics, The Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka, Osaka, 2016, pp.18 – 23, no. 1
Asahi Evening Newspaper, 5 December 2016, cover article
Art & Collection, September 2017 issue, Taipei, pp.162 – 165
Tosetsu, no. 779, February 2018 issue, The Ceramic Society of Japan, pp. 15-22
Exhibited
The Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka, Featured Exhibition The Beauty of Song Ceramics, 10 December 2016 - 26 March 2017
The Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka, Special exhibition The Beauty of Song Ceramics, 12 August - 10 September 2017
Further Details
Recounting Reemergence:
Dispelling Sixty Years of Myths on the Collection History of Bada Shanren’s Landscapes and Calligraphy

In 1699, Zhu Da (Bada Shanren) created Landscapes and Calligraphy dedicated to a gentleman friend. The eighteen leaf album was executed in ink on paper. The first six leaves reproduce the famous Preface to the Orchid Pavilion. The remaining twelve leaves constitute six pairs of landscapes and original verses.

During the Qing period, historic works of painting and calligraphy from the preceding dynasties were especially prized. As such, the genius of Bada Shanren’s free and expressive brushwork in the work was not recognised in his own day, and it is not known in records of the period. Landscapes and Calligraphy first comes to light through Zhang Daqian’s 1955 publication Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang. In December 1949, Zhang Daqian departed Chengdu on a direct flight to Taiwan. He took with him 50 of his own copies made from the frescoes at Dunhuang, along with numerous classical works of painting and calligraphy. These works accompanied him on his itinerant lifestyle, which took him from Hong Kong, to India, Argentina and many other destinations. In 1954 Zhang moved to Mogi das Cruzes in Brazil, buying over 200 acres of land. Here he built a Chinese style garden, which he named the Garden of Eight Virtues, or Bade Yuan. During this time, Zhang was in robust health, travelling between Japan, Brazil, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Europe and America. From a solid base in the art worlds of Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan, he also sought to break into the West. This was an expensive undertaking, and stretched his purse beyond the funds raised through his selling exhibitions. To meet this financial need, Zhang decided to sell off some of the historic works that had left Chengdu with him. In autumn 1954, Zhang began compiling a selection of classical Chinese paintings and calligraphic works from his own collection, to be published as Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang. In January 1955, after the closure of his latest exhibition in Hong Kong, Zhang flew direct to Japan to supervise printing of this publication. In Winter of that year its four imposing volumes were published in Japan, coinciding with the opening of Zhang’s latest Japanese exhibition. This publication cemented Zhang’s international reputation as a connoisseur, collector and practitioner of classical Chinese painting and calligraphy.

The pages of Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang lead the reader through an astounding array of classical works from the Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties. Soon after its publication, this compendium of Zhang’s collection attracted distinct attention from the metropolitan centres of New York and Beijing. In New York, Japanese American antique dealer Joseph Umeo Seo (1911-1998) brought Zhang’s catalogue to the attention of preeminent collector John M. Crawford Jr. (1913-1988). Together Seo and Crawford acquired several of the works listed in the catalogue. In 1962 Lawrence Sickman (1907- 1988) organised an exhibition of Crawford’s collection in New York. The accompanying volume edited by Sickman, Catalogue of the Exhibition of Chinese Calligraphy and Painting, includes 19 works also found in Zhang’s Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang. These span the Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties, including exceptional examples by leading masters of each period. Though we know it to be a substantial figure, it is impossible to calculate the exact number of classical paintings and calligraphy pieces Crawford acquired from Zhang’s collection.

Turning our attention to Beijing, preeminent connoisseur Zhang Heng (Zhang Congyu, 1915-1963) discussed Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang in his late 1950s publication Notes on the Authentication of Painting and Calligraphy from the Muyan Studio. Zhang Heng was a leading authority in connoisseurship: a member of the Palace Museum’s Committee for the Authentication of Cultural Relics, Deputy Editor in Chief of the Cultural Relics Bureau Publishing House, and Deputy Head of the Cultural Relics Bureau. In his Notes, he comments on several works by Bada Shanren recorded in Zhang Daqian’s Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang, and the discussion of Landscapes and Calligraphy reads as follows:

Bada Shanren, album of poems and paintings, six leaves.
Six leaves in ink and colour on paper, measuring … high and … wide. The landscapes are exceptionally fine, each leaf paired with an inscription. The dimensions of the inscriptions match those of the painting, and are undated. On the basis of the signature the album was likely produced when the artist was in his 70s. The album includes a freehand copy of Wang Xizhi’s (303-361) Preface to the Orchid Pavilion, which is recorded separately…. An accompanying semi-cursive script inscription dates the work to the yimao year, in the 38th year of the Kangxi reign period (1699), when Bada Shanren was 74 years of age.

Zhang Heng’s Notes approach the work in two parts, documenting the Preface to the Orchid Pavilion in a separate entry from Bada’s twelve album leaves of paired painting and original verse. He describes the landscapes as “exceptionally fine”, an appraisal based upon its publication in Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang. Zhang Heng was clearly deeply familiar with Bada’s oeuvre. His preliminary estimate, made before the transcription of the full inscriptions, states that the work dates from Bada Shanren’s seventies. This correlates directly with the 1699 date he later encountered on the accompanying inscription, when Bada was 74 years of age. This is testimony to Zhang Heng’s careful and protracted study. In the biography of Zhang Heng co-authored by his three children, they give the following account of their father:

Our father undertook this Herculean labour of documentation outside of his working hours… Every evening after finishing work and dinner he would immerse himself in a pile of books, deep into the night. Yet every evening there would be visitors, and our father would have to set his work aside…. Every evening he would wait for his guests to leave, whereupon he would resume his work, carrying on late into the night.

This Herculean project was the compilation of Notes on the Authentication of Painting and Calligraphy from the Muyan Studio. Zhang Hengs Notes exemplifies assiduous scholarship, diligently produced in the little spare time he had available. His work has rightly been the subject of serious, in-depth study by subsequent generations, who have lauded his mindset, erudition, selfpossession and insight.
Following its first publication in Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang, the location of Landscapes and Calligraphy on the Orchid Pavilion became a protracted mystery. In 1982, the Shanghai Renmin Chubanshe published the 17th edition of Yiyuan Duoying, focused on Bada Shanren. This referenced the twelve leaves of paired painting and calligraphy. However, Badas preceding six leaves reproducing the Preface to the Orchid Pavilion were omitted. In Zhang Hengs Notes, the two are necessarily separated as part of his systematic treatment of painting and calligraphy as distinct artforms. Yiyuan Duoying presents no discernable justification for its bisection of the album.

There is a recurrent error in the recorded provenance of Poems and Paintings on the Orchid Pavilion Preface. In Bada Shanren Quanji, vol. 4, the eighteen leaves of the work are captioned as in the collection of John M. Crawford Jr.. In Bada Shanren Shichaos
catalogue of Bada’s poems inscribed on paintings, the work is again recorded as in Crawford’s collection. There is also an index of extant paintings by Bada Sharen at the end of volume four of Bada Shanren Quanji. While this index clearly records private and public collections, both within China and internationally, Landscapes and Calligraphy is inexplicably omitted. How can we determine if the work was part of Crawford’s collection? The assertions of the aforementioned studies are certainly questionable. Preeminent scholar of Bada Shanren Wang Fangyu (1913-1997) repeatedly stated that the location of the work, and the identity of its owner, were unknown. Wang was a Chinese immigrant to America, and a close associate of Crawford. The two men were born in the same year. In The Calligraphy of Bada Shanren, Wang includes the following short entry, entitled ‘Bada Shanren’s Preface to the Orchid Pavilion’:

No. 12. Simao year (1699), 8th month. Former collection of Zhang Daqian. Current location unknown. Recorded in Masterpieces
of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang, vol. 3. Landscapes and Calligraphy, six leaves (authentic). (From Bada Shanren Quanji, vol. 5. pp. 1205.)

In his 1990 Yale U.P. publication Master of the Lotus Garden: The Life and Art of Bada Shanren, Wang repeats his assertion that the location of Landscapes and Calligraphy is unknown (p.270, appendix C, dated works no. 119). Once again, the only reference Wang gives is Zhang Daqians catalogue of 1955. Wang was the preeminent scholar and collector of Bada Shanren outside of China. Yet he never knew the location of Landscapes and Calligraphy. He never had the opportunity to view it in person, and continually referred to it through Zhang Daqians 1955 publication. Thus, we can be certain that Landscapes and Calligraphy was not in the collection of Wangs friend John M. Crawford Jr.

There are some who claim that Landscapes and Calligraphy was in Wang Fangyu’s own collection. However, there is no discernible
basis for this. Were Wang to have this work within his family collection, it is not conceivable that he would have still omitted to mention this in his own 1990 publication. Moreover, the work is not included among the thirty pieces recorded in the 2003 publication of Wang and his wife’s collection: In Pursuit of Heavenly Harmony: Paintings and Calligraphy by Bada Shanren from the Estate of Wang Fangyu and Sum Wai.

Following its publication in 1955 in Zhang Daqian’s Masterpieces of Chinese Painting from Ta Feng Tang, Landscapes and Calligraphy
seemed to have disappeared without trace. For more than sixty years its location was unknown to the international community of collectors. The consignment of twelve leaves of paired painting and verse from Landscapes and Calligraphy, offered this autumn
in Christie’s Hong Kong, is hugely beneficial for the scholarly record of this work. This album travelled with Zhang Daqian
through his itinerant life. As these travels included Zhang’s brief residency in Hong Kong, the reappearance of this album in Christies is something of a homecoming.

Lamentably, the album leaves of Landscapes and Calligraphy have been remounted as six vertical scrolls. Each scroll displays the paired calligraphy above the corresponding painting in a Japanese style mount. In its present format, Bada Shanrens preceding six-leaf rendition of Preface to the Orchid Pavilion is lost. Yet this remounting in no way detracts from the painting and calligraphys compelling and thought-provoking beauty. The collection history of Landscapes and Calligraphy has been a mystery for over sixty years. As with many of Bada Shanrens great accomplishments, these sixty years will likely remain one of art historys enduring enigmas.





Lot Essay

A NORTHERN SONG CELADON RU WARE BOWL

Tetsuro Degawa, Director,
The Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka

The newly discovered heirloom Ru ware bowl; its beauty of colour and form

It was very fortunate to have been able to showcase the newly discovered Ru ware bowl in “The Beauty of Song Ceramics” exhibition at the Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka in 2016. Here is how this wonderful opportunity came about.

The Museum of Oriental Ceramics houses the Northern Song Ru ware narcissus basin as one of the most important works in our permanent collection.

With its characteristic sky blue glaze, Ru ware is inarguably the most beautiful ceramic ware of all. Producing this elegant blue glaze colour was the priority for Ru celadons. The firing temperature was monitored carefully, and it did not matter if the clay was brittle, or if there were small crackles, it was the colour of the glaze that mattered the most. No other Chinese ceramic ware has such a high requirement of the glaze as Ru ware. Among the vast number of deposited sherds found in the Qingliangsi kiln site in Baofeng, Henan, very few have sky-blue coloured glaze, which suggests that the colour of the glaze was its foremost desired quality. In order to appreciate the delicate colours, celadon wares have to be viewed in an ideal surrounding with natural lighting, and the exhibition space at the Museum of Oriental Ceramics was particularly dedicated to this effect. As artificial lighting changes both the temperature as well as the hue of the glaze, which adversely affects its appearance, it is most appropriate to view pieces under natural light.

In the 1999 exhibition ‘Song Ceramics’ (June 20 –August 15, 1999) held at the Museum of Oriental Ceramics, five Ru wares were shown, three of which were heirloom pieces handed down in Japanese collections. One of them is the narcissus basin from our museum collection. The second was later donated to the Tokyo National Museum. The last was purchased at auction in 2012 and is currently owned by an overseas collector. Other than in the National Palace Museum in Taipei (which houses 21 Ru wares), The Palace Museum in Beijing (houses 15), The National Museum of China (houses 8), The Sir Percival David Collection (houses 12) or the British Museum (houses 4), it was extremely rare to have been able to see as many as five Ru wares together. The Ru wares were the highlights of the exhibition and presenting them side by side made it possible to compare and acknowledge the slight differences in the hues and forms among the surviving wares. By the time the exhibition was held in 1999, Ru wares were well known, as archaeological studies of the kiln site in Qingliangsi had progressed significantly since its discovery in 1987.

In 2009, we held the exhibition‘Northern Song Ru Ware: Recent Archaeological Findings” (Dec.5, 2009 - March 28, 2010) (fig. 1) to show the artifacts excavated at the kiln site from 1987 to date. Many examples, some of which were not known forms in heirloom pieces, demonstrated the wide variety of Ru wares. The catalogue published for this exhibition later played an important role leading to our new discovery. It was gratifying to know that this exhibition advanced new perceptions of Ru ware, to be acknowledged even outside China. In the catalogue, the archaeologist overseeing the excavation noted that these were rarely of sky blue glazed, proving how desirable this glaze hue was when studying heirloom pieces.

In 2016, the Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka, held a special exhibition on Northern Song Ru ware narcissus basins from the National Palace Museum, Taipei (Dec 10, 2016 – March 26, 2017). This exhibition showcased four narcissus basins owned by the National Palace Museum, centered around the masterpiece – the so-called ‘uncrackled narcissus basin’, along with a later copy produced in the Qing dynasty.

The Northern Song Ru ‘uncrackled narcissus basin’ was presented as “the finest ceramic work of art in human history”. Ru ware was recognized as attaining the highest quality of all Chinese ceramics, and the most sophisticated ceramics ever created. It is also stated in the Geguyaolun that the most precious of celadon wares is the “uncrackled” ware, proving it is, indeed, the finest in human history.

Coinciding with this event, the “The Beauty of Song Ceramics”, a special exhibition mainly of Song ceramics from the museum’s permanent collection, was held. It also featured the “newly discovered” Ru bowl, which attracted many visitors and gathered much publicity (fig. 2). This new discovery would be the third known heirloom Northern Song Ru ware in Japan, and the only one in bowl form. The newly discovered piece was similar in form and size to the excavated Ru ware shown in the catalogue (no. 67) of the foregoing exhibition, ‘Northern Song Ru Ware: Recent Archaeological Findings”, but with distinctively different pale sky blue colour. The lip was broken and repaired with gold, but there was no evidence of any foreign fragments used in the course of the restoration. The piece was kept and handed down originally in its complete form, but was broken and then carefully restored with lacquer mixed with gold - the traditional kintsugi technique of restoration - by the then owner. The lacquer adheres the broken sections together, and gold powder is added to the join lines for aesthetic purposes. This method is traditionally used on tea wares, where the gold lacquer draws one’s attention and adds to the appreciation. When it was shown at the exhibition in Osaka, the rim was broken in six parts and repaired by kintsugi, as show in the illustration. (fig. 3)

The newly discovered Ru ware bowl was included in the exhibition purely by chance. When we were preparing for the “Beauty of Song Ceramics” we were informed of the existence of an heirloom Ru ware, similar to a piece in the 2009 catalogue. The representative of the owner brought the actual object to the museum to be authenticated. In November 2015, our chief curator Mr. Kobayashi inspected the actual piece and reported his findings to me. Later in March 2016, the piece was brought in to the museum again, and I had the chance to see the work in person. The form and size were comparable to the excavated examples, on each three small spur marks were visible at the foot. Its superior glaze colour, however, is probably why it survived as an heirloom object. We confirmed this was indeed authentic Ru ware and the bowl was deposited at the museum that day to be included in our exhibition in December. In some cases, we would ask for the opinion of external experts, but having carried out numerous studies and research on Ru wares, we were very confident in our assessment. Having inspected many examples of both excavated and heirloom Ru celadon wares, the consensus between Mr. Kobayashi and myself was very compelling.

Unlike excavated examples, this bowl, with its exquisite colour and lustrous surface, possesses dignity. The thinning glaze around the rim shows the colour of the body underneath is of faint pinkish tone, with three small spur marks at the foot. Excavated pieces are often chipped and unattractive in comparison.

The Provenance

This Ru ware bowl is accompanied by an old wooden box, inscribed in ink with “Seiji chawan” (celadon tea bowl) (fig. 4). The box suggests that it has been in a Japanese collection for a long time, but no further information is stated on the box.

The bowl previously belonged to Mr. Yuzura Sato (1917-1996) (fig. 5). We were informed by Mr. Yoshiro Kudo, doctor and ceramics researcher who met Mr. Sato in Kurume, that he graduated from Tokyo University of Foreign Studies with a degree in Spanish, and became a faculty member of Kyushu University teaching French. Mr. Kudo was a medical student at Kurume University and coincidentally met Mr. Sato in an antique shop. Mr. Sato purchased the bowl from Kusaba Antiques in Kurume in 1954.

Mr. Kudo came by the museum after the Beauty of Song Ceramics exhibition and gave a detailed account of how the Ru bowl was acquired by Mr. Sato. Mr. Sato returned the bowl to Kusaba Antiques at one point, after showing the celadon bowl to Mr. Kudo. However, at Mr. Kudo’s continued enthusiasm and urging, Mr. Sato eventually bought the bowl back, at the time already repaired with gold lacquer. He treasured the bowl dearly until his late years, and did not sell it even when he had to raise funds for his studies in the University of Rennes in France. After returning from France, he taught French as a professor at Hiroshima University.

Mr. Kudo once mentioned to Junkichi Mayuyama of Mayuyama Ryusendo, a notable Chinese antiques art dealer in Kyobashi, Tokyo, the beautiful celadon ware owned by Mr. Sato. Mayuyama travelled to Hiroshima to examine the bowl and offered to buy it, but the offer was declined. Afterwards, Mr. Sato moved to Tsukuba University, and after reaching retirement age for National Universities, he taught at Kobe Womens’ College.

Features of the Ru ware bowl

How can one determine if a celadon bowl of just 10.2cm in diameter and 5.2cm in height is an heirloom piece? Its features, such as its remarkable skyblue colour and beautiful lustrous glaze surface, completely set it apart from excavated examples. The excavated pieces rarely possess this graceful sky blue colour, and while it has been restored, all original fragments are present, so we can reasonably deduce that it was initially in pristine condition. From its complete form and beautiful glaze it is highly unlikely that this bowl would have been a piece to be disposed of.

This elegant and delicate bowl also has a thinned rim, and the fact that it has been restored by kintsugi before being acquired by Mr. Sato attests to the assumption that it was treasured and handed down through generations in Japan.

(Translated into English from the original text in Japanese)

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