AN OVAL SONGHUA INK STONE AND ‘BUTTER STONE’ BOX AND COVER

QING DYNASTY (1644-1911)

Details
AN OVAL SONGHUA INK STONE AND ‘BUTTER STONE’ BOX AND COVER
QING DYNASTY (1644-1911)
Box: 3 3⁄8 in. (8.5 cm) long, Japanese wood box
Provenance
Acquired in Kansai, Japan in 2014

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Lot Essay

It was not until the Kangxi period that the usage of Songhua stone from modern-day Jilin province became to be highly regarded for its qualities in the grinding of ink. From the Kangxi period through the Qianlong period it was one of the preferred stones used for grinding ink. The present ink stone is accompanied by a highly unusual box and cover made of ‘butter stone’. While the exact composition of this kind of material remains uncertain, its name is well recorded in the Qing imperial archive. An entry dated to the 17th day of the 4th month of the 11th year of the Yongzheng reign mentions that ‘nine Duan ink stones with “butter stone” boxes were presented by the viceroy of the Guandong region to the Yongzheng Emperor. A purple Duan ink stone with a ‘butter stone’ box and cover dating to the Jiaqing period (fig. 1) was included in the exhibition titled Selected Qing Court Inkstones from the Palace Museum Collection in 2018 held at the Palace Museum, Beijing. The underside of the present ink stone is incised with a four-character seal mark reading Yongzheng nian zhi.

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