11th Sep, 2025 11:00

The Collection of Sam and Myrna Myers Part 1

 
  Lot 153
 

153

A RARE KINRANDE SQUARE WATER JAR, MIZUSASHI, MING DYNASTY
This lot is from a single owner collection and is therefore offered without reserve

Sold for €4,160

including Buyer's Premium


Lot details

Published: Jean-Paul Desroches (ed.) et al, Two Americans in Paris. A Quest for Asian Art, Paris, 2016, p. 256-257, no. 404.

Exhibited:
1. Pointe-à-Callière Museum, From the Lands of Asia. The Sam and Myrna Myers Collection, Montréal, 17 November 2016-19 March 2017.
2. Kimbell Art Museum, From the Lands of Asia. The Sam and Myrna Myers Collection, Fort Worth, Texas, 4 March-19 August 2018.

China, 1368-1644. Heavily potted, of square cross-section, and tapering towards the recessed foot. The walls painted in vibrant iron-red and green and black enamels to depict a lobed cartouche to each exterior side enclosing auspicious flowers including chrysanthemums, prunus, and bamboo, all reserved on a dense diaper pattern ground below a rim lined by scrolls. The interior similarly decorated with roundels lined in green, and the well with a scene featuring a mythical animal in a river landscape amid lingzhi and ruyi-form clouds.

Provenance: The Collection of Sam and Myrna Myers, Paris, France. Acquired between circa 1965-2012.
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear and manufacturing irregularities including kiln grit and firing cracks, light rubbing and little flaking to enamels.

Weight: 2.6 kg
Dimensions: Length 20.3 cm

Kinrande can be translated as ‘gold brocade’ from Japanese and is the Japanese name for Chinese porcelain wares with their outside covered with a finely drawn gold decoration on a red ground. This ware was produced in the mid-16th century and popular in Japan. Kinrande was most appreciated by the Japanese, and highly sought after by tea masters to be used during the tea ceremony.

Expert’s note: Gold decoration is generally quite fragile and often shows signs of wear. The present water pot most likely had gold decoration inside the red roundels to the interior of the mizusashi which faded due to being used as a water pot for many years.

Literature comparison:
Compare a related kinrande type vessel, also with lobed cartouches of iron-red on a diaper patterned ground, dated to the 16th century, in the Chicago Institute of Art, reference number
1964.642.

 

Published: Jean-Paul Desroches (ed.) et al, Two Americans in Paris. A Quest for Asian Art, Paris, 2016, p. 256-257, no. 404.

Exhibited:
1. Pointe-à-Callière Museum, From the Lands of Asia. The Sam and Myrna Myers Collection, Montréal, 17 November 2016-19 March 2017.
2. Kimbell Art Museum, From the Lands of Asia. The Sam and Myrna Myers Collection, Fort Worth, Texas, 4 March-19 August 2018.

China, 1368-1644. Heavily potted, of square cross-section, and tapering towards the recessed foot. The walls painted in vibrant iron-red and green and black enamels to depict a lobed cartouche to each exterior side enclosing auspicious flowers including chrysanthemums, prunus, and bamboo, all reserved on a dense diaper pattern ground below a rim lined by scrolls. The interior similarly decorated with roundels lined in green, and the well with a scene featuring a mythical animal in a river landscape amid lingzhi and ruyi-form clouds.

Provenance: The Collection of Sam and Myrna Myers, Paris, France. Acquired between circa 1965-2012.
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear and manufacturing irregularities including kiln grit and firing cracks, light rubbing and little flaking to enamels.

Weight: 2.6 kg
Dimensions: Length 20.3 cm

Kinrande can be translated as ‘gold brocade’ from Japanese and is the Japanese name for Chinese porcelain wares with their outside covered with a finely drawn gold decoration on a red ground. This ware was produced in the mid-16th century and popular in Japan. Kinrande was most appreciated by the Japanese, and highly sought after by tea masters to be used during the tea ceremony.

Expert’s note: Gold decoration is generally quite fragile and often shows signs of wear. The present water pot most likely had gold decoration inside the red roundels to the interior of the mizusashi which faded due to being used as a water pot for many years.

Literature comparison:
Compare a related kinrande type vessel, also with lobed cartouches of iron-red on a diaper patterned ground, dated to the 16th century, in the Chicago Institute of Art, reference number
1964.642.

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