:Christie's sold the most expensive Asian work of art ever when an
exceptionally rare and important blue and white jar, Yuan
dynasty, Fourteenth Century, realized $27,679,100. After a fierce
bidding battle with more than six clients vying over the
telephone and in the room, the jar was eventually acquired by
Eskenazi Ltd for a private buyer. This is not only a world record
price ever paid for any Chinese work of art, it is also the
highest price paid for any work of art sold at Christie's this
year.
Dating from the Yuan dynasty (1279-1368), the rare, and
previously unrecorded blue and white guan jar is finely decorated
with a narrative scene in vibrant underglaze cobalt blue. The
jar, which depicts scenes from contemporary literature, is
thought to be one of only eight to have survived to the present
day.
Featuring a peony scroll band around the shoulders and a petal
band around the base, the jar has vividly painted scenes from the
story of the conflict between the states of Yan and Qi in the
Warring States period (AD 475-221). A figure in a cart, pulled by
a tiger and a leopard, follows two foot soldiers running by a
stream. Over the bridge is a scholarly figure on a piebald horse
looking across a rocky landscape to another horseman. The jar was
acquired in China by Captain Baron Haro van Hemert, a keen
collector of art, who was in the Dutch Marine Corps and was
stationed in Beijing from 1913 to 1923.
Price reported includes buyer's premium.
For information, www.Christies.com.