Sold for €2,600
including Buyer's Premium
China, 618-907. The deep rounded sides raised on a pedestal foot and rising to a flared rim, the sides encircled by a central ridged band dividing two bands of finely engraved scrolling vines bearing neatly incised leaves and blossoms, the upper band interspersed with five birds, four perched and one in flight, all reserved on ring-punched grounds, the domed base similarly decorated.
Provenance: From the private collection of Alan and Simone Hartman, New York. With an old ‘A & S Hartman Collection’ printed label, inscribed with Alan Hartman’s dating ‘Tang’, along with further abbreviated notes and symbols. Alan Hartman (1930-2023) was an influential American art dealer, who took over his parents’ antique business in Manhattan and established the legendary Rare Art Gallery on Madison Avenue, with further locations in Dallas and Palm Beach. His wife Simone (née Horowitz) already served as assistant manager of the New York gallery before the couple married in 1975, and together they built a renowned collection for over half a century and became noted art patrons, enriching the collections of important museums including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (which opened the Alan and Simone Hartman Galleries in 2013) as well as the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Brooklyn Museum in New York. Alan Hartman has been described as the greatest antiques dealer of our generation, and was widely recognized as a world authority in Chinese jade, bronzes, and Asian works of art.
Condition: Good condition with expected ancient wear and tarnish, traces of use, small nicks and minor heat damage. Minimally warped. Manufacturing irregularities including some casting grit to the interior. Distinct remnants of gilt in some recesses of the incision work.
Weight: 120 g
Dimensions: Diameter 7.8 cm, Height 5.6 cm
Literature comparison:
Compare a related silver stem cup, 6 cm high, dated to the Tang dynasty, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession number 23.226.1.
Auction result comparison:
Type: Closely related
Auction: Christie’s New York, 20 March 2015, lot 727
Price: USD 27,500 or approx. EUR 33,500 converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing
Description: A small silver stem cup, China, Tang dynasty
Expert remark: Compare the closely related form and repoussé work with similar floral decoration in two bands and ring-punched ground. Note the similar size (7.3 cm) yet lower weight of only 61 g.
China, 618-907. The deep rounded sides raised on a pedestal foot and rising to a flared rim, the sides encircled by a central ridged band dividing two bands of finely engraved scrolling vines bearing neatly incised leaves and blossoms, the upper band interspersed with five birds, four perched and one in flight, all reserved on ring-punched grounds, the domed base similarly decorated.
Provenance: From the private collection of Alan and Simone Hartman, New York. With an old ‘A & S Hartman Collection’ printed label, inscribed with Alan Hartman’s dating ‘Tang’, along with further abbreviated notes and symbols. Alan Hartman (1930-2023) was an influential American art dealer, who took over his parents’ antique business in Manhattan and established the legendary Rare Art Gallery on Madison Avenue, with further locations in Dallas and Palm Beach. His wife Simone (née Horowitz) already served as assistant manager of the New York gallery before the couple married in 1975, and together they built a renowned collection for over half a century and became noted art patrons, enriching the collections of important museums including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (which opened the Alan and Simone Hartman Galleries in 2013) as well as the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Brooklyn Museum in New York. Alan Hartman has been described as the greatest antiques dealer of our generation, and was widely recognized as a world authority in Chinese jade, bronzes, and Asian works of art.
Condition: Good condition with expected ancient wear and tarnish, traces of use, small nicks and minor heat damage. Minimally warped. Manufacturing irregularities including some casting grit to the interior. Distinct remnants of gilt in some recesses of the incision work.
Weight: 120 g
Dimensions: Diameter 7.8 cm, Height 5.6 cm
Literature comparison:
Compare a related silver stem cup, 6 cm high, dated to the Tang dynasty, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession number 23.226.1.
Auction result comparison:
Type: Closely related
Auction: Christie’s New York, 20 March 2015, lot 727
Price: USD 27,500 or approx. EUR 33,500 converted and adjusted for inflation at the time of writing
Description: A small silver stem cup, China, Tang dynasty
Expert remark: Compare the closely related form and repoussé work with similar floral decoration in two bands and ring-punched ground. Note the similar size (7.3 cm) yet lower weight of only 61 g.
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