Lot 251
East Asia, China, Qing Dynasty, ca. 19th to early 20th century CE. A luminous study in restraint and quiet complexity, this celadon bowl carries the ghostly elegance of Song dynasty ideals into the later Qing period, where reverence for antiquity became an art form in itself. The bowl is potted with a gently flaring profile, rising from a short, neatly finished foot to a broad, open mouth that invites both the eye and the hand. Its surface is enveloped in a pale bluish-green celadon glaze, cool and milky in tone, animated throughout by a finely developed crackle network. These intersecting lines form an organic web across the interior and exterior, evoking ice thawing on a spring pond or veins beneath translucent jade. The glaze pools softly in recesses and thins at the rim, revealing subtle tonal variation prized by connoisseurs. Size: 7" Diameter x 3.2" H (17.8 cm x 8.1 cm)
This intentional crackle pays direct homage to Ge ware, one of the most revered ceramic traditions of the Song dynasty. Ge wares were celebrated not for painted decoration or bold form, but for their philosophical embrace of imperfection, where crackle was cultivated rather than concealed. By the Qing dynasty, such wares were studied, collected, and meticulously reinterpreted, particularly under emperors who saw themselves as guardians of classical taste. Bowls like this reflect that lineage of scholarly nostalgia and technical mastery.
The unadorned form allows the glaze to take center stage, transforming surface into subject. Light glides across the bowl, catching in the crackle lines and lending the vessel a quiet, shifting vitality. Whether displayed alone or used as a contemplative object, it rewards prolonged looking, the kind favored by poets, collectors, and those who understand that refinement often whispers rather than shouts. A refined example of Qing dynasty antiquarian taste, this bowl stands as both an homage to Song dynasty ceramic philosophy and a testament to the enduring appeal of celadon as a material of calm, balance, and timeless beauty.
Provenance: private Great Barrington, Massachusetts, USA collection, 1995 to 2005 or via inheritance; ex-JCT collection, U.S. Navy Commander, assembled 1926 to 1934
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#201128
- Condition: Intact and excellent.
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| $2,000 | $4,999 | $250 |
| $5,000 | $9,999 | $500 |
| $10,000 | $19,999 | $1,000 |
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| $100,000 | $199,999 | $10,000 |
| $200,000 + | $20,000 |