J.J. Lally & Co., Oriental Art / New York City, New York

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Past Exhibition

Silver and Gold in Ancient China

March 16 – April 14, 2012

A PAIR OF CHASED AND PARCEL-GILT SILVER DISHES
26.
A PAIR OF CHASED AND PARCEL-GILT SILVER DISHES

Southern Song Dynasty (A.D. 1127-1279)

of flat circular saucer shape, each chased in the center with a medallion formed by a pair of aster-like flowers on curling leafy stems, covered with gilding, the lower edge of the shallow well decorated with a border of striated petal-tips and the flat rim decorated with a running band of cash-diaper enclosed by a half-round lip, with a wash of gilding over both decorative bands, the underside left plain, with the chased designs showing through in faint relief, the surface with scattered tarnish and associated corrosion from burial remaining, each dish chased on the underside in outlined kaishu script with a single Chinese character di (砥), which may indicate the owner’s name.

Diameter 6 inches (15.2 cm)

Compare the small Song silver dish of similar form, also chased with a floral motif in the center and with a cash-diaper border on the flat rim, formerly in the collection of Senator Hugh Scott and now in the Uldry collection, illustrated in the catalogue published by the Rietberg Museum entitled Chinesisches Gold und Silber: die Sammlung Pierre Uldry, Zurich, 1994, p. 230, no. 273; together with a Song gold dish of similar form and design also formerly in the collection of Senator Hugh Scott and now in the Uldry collection, illustrated loc.cit., no. 272. The same two dishes were previously exhibited at the China Institute in America and published by Singer in the catalogue entitled Early Chinese Gold & Silver, New York, 1971, nos. 90 and 92.

A set of nine small dishes similarly engraved with various floral designs, from a Song dynasty hoard excavated in 1981 in Jiangsu Province, are illustrated by Xiao and Wong in the excavation report entitled ‘Jiangsu Suyang Pingqiao chutu Song dai yinqi jiaocang’ (Song Dynasty Silver Hoard Excavated from Jiangsu Province, Suyang County, Pingqiao Town), Wenwu, 1986 No. 5, p. 73, fig. 3.

Compare also the two silver saucer dishes with parcel-gilt incised and repoussé floral decoration, from the Muwen Tang Collection, illustrated by Kwan in Chinese Silver, Hong Kong, 2004, pp. 170-171, no. 79, attributed to the Southern Song dynasty.

南宋    鎏金花卉紋銀碟一對    徑 15.2 厘米

26.
A PAIR OF CHASED AND PARCEL-GILT SILVER DISHES

Southern Song Dynasty (A.D. 1127-1279)

Diameter 6 inches (15.2 cm)

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