LOT 103 Late Ming Dynasty, 17th century A carved ivory brush pot, bitong
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Late Ming Dynasty, 17th century|Carved to the exterior with a continuous scene, depicting a scholar leaning on a low table at leisure under a pine tree, gazing upon a travelling dignitary holding a walking cane, all set amidst a garden landscape surrounded by rocky outcrops, the reverse with a further boy tending a goose on a sampan, under drooping branches of a willow tree. 14.2cm (5 5/8in) high.|明末 十七世紀 牙雕高士山水圖筆筒Provenance: Harry Geoffrey Beasley (1881-1939), collection no.2016, acquired on 9 August 1919, and thence by descent來源: Harry Geoffrey Beasley先生(1881-1939)收藏,藏品編號2016,購於1919年8月9日,並由後人保存迄今Harry Geoffrey Beasley was a wealthy brewery owner whose private collecting passion began when, aged 13, he bought two Solomon Island clubs. In 1914 he was elected to the Royal Anthropological Institute with which he maintained an association until 1937. He and his wife, Irene, established the Cranmore Ethnographic Museum in Chislehurst, Kent where they had moved in 1928, compiling the Cranmore Index of Pacific Material Culture based on James Edge-Partington's Index for the British Museum and forming a considerable library. Although the Beasleys collected artefacts worldwide – including Africa (particularly Benin), North-west America and Asia - their main focus was the Pacific. Objects were acquired from dealers, missionaries and from, or in exchanges with, various museums. Beasley's comprehensive monograph on Oceanic fish-hooks was published in 1928. The Cranmore Museum was damaged by bombing in World War 2 and in accordance with Beasley's will his widow, Irene M Beasley (q.v), offered the first selection of the collection (apart from a limited reservation for herself) as a donation to the British Museum. The gift of several thousand items became fully effective in 1944. Other named beneficiaries include the Pitt-Rivers Museum, Oxford; The Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge; and National Museums, Scotland.Compare with a similar ivory brush pot, late Ming dynasty, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Hong Kong, 2002, p.111, no.101.
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2017年11月7-8日
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